At 650, Bihar leads in extreme weather deaths in 2019: IMD report

Source – business-standard.com

Bihar suffered the most – with 650 deaths – due to various extreme weather conditions in the country last year, a compilation by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) from media and government reports showed.

An official statement issued by the IMD showed that almost 1,560 people died in 2019 due to unusual weather events.

These include heavy rain and floods, heat wave, lightning, thunderstorm and hailstorm.

The year 2019 was the seventh warmest recorded in the country since 1901, the statement showed. This was substantially lower than the highest warming observed over India during 2016, it added.

In 2019, the IMD statement said that eight cyclonic storms formed over the seas against the normal of five. “Heavy rain and flood-related incidents reportedly claimed over 850 lives from different parts of the country during the pre-monsoon, monsoon and post-monsoon periods. Of these, 306 lives were lost from Bihar alone,136 from Maharashtra, 107 from Uttar Pradesh, 88 from Kerala, 80 from Rajasthan and 43 from Karnataka,” the statement said.

Meanwhile, in a related event, the Centre on Monday approved the release of Rs 5,908.56 crore to seven states, including Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka and Assam, as assistance for the damage caused due to various calamities last year.

The home ministry, in a statement, said the decision was taken at a meeting of a high-level committee (HLC), chaired by Union home minister Amit Shah.

The HLC approved additional central assistance of Rs 5,908.56 crore to seven states from the National Disaster Response Fund (NDRF). Of this, Rs 616.63 crore will be given to Assam, Rs 284.93 crore to Himachal Pradesh, Rs 1,869.85 crore to Karnataka, Rs 1,749.73 crore to Madhya Pradesh, Rs 956.93 crore to Maharashtra, Rs 63.32 to Tripura and Rs 367.17 crore to Uttar Pradesh for floods, landslides or cloudburst during the monsoon season, the statement said.

Earlier, the central government released an interim financial assistance of Rs 3,200 crore to four states – Rs 1,200 crore to Karnataka, Rs 1,000 crore to Madhya Pradesh, Rs 600 crore to Maharashtra and Rs 400 crore to Bihar.

During 2019-20, the government released Rs 8,068.33 crore to 27 states as central share from the State Disaster Response Fund (SDRF).

Bihar Assembly Polls: NDA Deal Yet to Be Finalised, LJP Preparing for All 243 Seats, Says Chirag Paswan.

Source – news18.coms

Sheikhpura: No seat-sharing formula has been finalised among partners of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) for Bihar polls and the Lok Jan Shakti Party is readying itself for all 243 Assembly constituencies, LJP chief Chirag Paswan said on Saturday.

He, however, made it clear that JD(U) chief and Chief Minister Nitish Kumar is the leader of NDA in Bihar and assembly elections will be fought under his leadership in the state.

Paswan, the Lok Sabha member from Jamui, said any decision on sharing the seats would be taken according to the situation. The LJP party is making preparations for all 243 constituencies, he added. The BJP, JD(U) and LJP are the constituents of NDA in Bihar.

The Assembly election is likely to be held in October-November this year.

On the Citizenship Amendment Act, Paswan said his party is with the central government on the issue and charged the opposition of spreading rumour on the issue.

Hatao Nitish in 2020: Jailed Lalu Yadav coins slogan for RJD as Bihar enters election year.

Source – indiatoday.in

Rashtriya Janata Dal supremo Lalu Prasad is in jail completing his sentence in the Fodder Scam, but that doesn’t prevent him from remaining active in Bihar’s politics.

It’s a new year and a significant one for Bihar as it heads for assembly elections that are likely to be held by the end of 2020.

Gearing up his party for the assembly polls, Lalu Yadav has coined a new slogan for his supporters: “Do hazaar bees, hatao Nitish (Remove Nitish in 2020).”

Lalu Yadav said this in a tweet from his personal Twitter handle which is being operated by his office in consultation with him and his family members.

Lalu Yadav’s RJD and Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal (United) are the two main political forces in Bihar.

In 2015, to stop the BJP’s victory march, Nitish Kumar and Lalu Yadav joined hands, formed the Mahagathbandhan (grand alliance) and won the election with RJD emerging as the single-largest party and Nitish Kumar becoming the chief minister.

However, by 2017, differences between the two parties soured to the extent that Nitish Kumar ditched RJD and joined hands with the BJP to form a new government.

Meanwhile, as Bihar gears up for assembly elections, the RJD and JD(U) have also started a poster war in state capital Patna to slam each other.

In its posters, the JD(U) praises the 15-year rule of Nitish Kumar as Bihar’s chief minister as an era of progress and development. While the RJD has equated this tenure as one marred with corruption and ‘jungle raj’.

Bihar government schools’ students to become police cadets.

Source – hindustantimes.com

In an effort to fight incidents like child marriage, female foeticide or even liquor vending, the government has introduced a student police cadet (SPC) project in all the government schools across the state, under which a group of girls and boys from every school are being groomed to evolve as future leaders.

The students are being explained how to respect the laws, maintain discipline and civic sense and how to stop social evils like child marriages, female foeticide, liquor vending, domestic violence and teasing. They are also being familiarised with the way the police function and are being taught how to act like a common link between the police and the community.

It’s an education department project which is being implemented by the Bihar Education Project (BEP) Council, a part of the state education department, responsible to bring quantitative and qualitative improvement in elementary education system in the state and to improve education standards in elementary schools.

Altogether 1,100 government schools of the state have been covered under the project and in every school, 22 girls and 22 boys have been selected for the project.

In Patna district, altogether 1,760 girls and boys from 40 government schools have been selected to become the SPCs.

“The numbers of schools under the project vary in different districts. In Patna, 40 schools have been identified and they are being trained to work as SPCs. During the training sessions, which take place on Saturdays, the students are being explained how to prepare a plan of action to stop certain social evils and coordinate with the police and the community to succeed in their mission,” Neeraj Kumar, district education officer, Patna district, said.

There are certain issues which cannot be solved only by police’s interference.” You need people to intervene and stop the evil. The most common issue these days is child marriage and female foeticide,” he said.

Another very common problem these days is liquor vending.

Many teenagers had been found in liquor vending network. The SPC’s intervention may prove to be very affective in this direction also, he added.

Rajesh Thakur, an official from BEP, Patna, said the cadets would be provided caps with the logo of the SPC and a whistle. “And in every school there will be a nodal teacher to head the group of cadets of that school. The nodal teacher has been imparted training by a master trainer of that district to handle cases, while the district level master trainers have been imparted training by the BEP at a workshop recently held in the state capital,” he said.

The training programme in district is almost over and the cadets will now be taken to police stations and camps in their localities to learn how police respond and take actions in different cases, he added.

“The cadets will be in regular touch with their nodal teachers and the local cops. In fact, this project of student police cadet is intended to bridge the gap between the police and common people. In many cases, people do not approach the police because of various reasons. This has to be changed,” he said.

CSBC Bihar Admit Card 2020 out@csbc.bih.nic.in, Check CSBC Bihar Admit Card 2020.

Source – jagranjosh.com

CSBC Bihar Admit Card 2020: Download Link has been activated at the official website of Central Selection Board of Constable (CSBC).i.e.csbc.bih.nic.in. With the releasing the admit card, now all the candidates applied for Bihar Police Constable Exam 2020 against the advertisement number 02/2019 can download their admit cards through the official website or following the instructions given below. 

It is to be noted that CSBC Bihar Police Constable Exam 2020 is scheduled to be held on 12 January and 20 January 2020 in two sessions. i.e. Morning and Afternoon Session at various exam centres of the state. The morning session will start from 10 AM to 12 PM while the afternoon will be conducted from 2 PM to 4  PM. Candidates are advised to check their exam centre details by downloading through the official website.

Candidates can download the admit cards from the official website and those who will not be able to download their admit cards, they can obtain their admit cards through the offline mode from 6 to 7 January 2020.

The board will release the details regarding the exam centre on 9 January 2020. Candidates are advised to visit the official website of Central Selection Board of Constable (CSBC) for the latest updates. Candidates can also download their admit cards by following the instructions given in this article or by clicking on the provided link below. 

Process to Download Bihar Police Constable Admit Card 2020

  • Candidates are required to visit the Central Selection Board of Constable (CSBC) Website. i.e. csbc.bih.nic.in.
  • Click on Bihar Police Constable Admit Card 2020 flashing on the homepage.
  • Enter Registration Number/Roll Number, Mobile Number, Captcha Code and click on the submit button. 
  • The Bihar Police Constable Admit Card 2020 will be displayed on the screen.
  • Candidates can download the Bihar Police Constable Admit Card 2020 and save it for future reference.

Bihar Police Constable Exam 2020 Highlights

  • Bihar Police Constable Exam 2020 – 12 January and 20 January 2020
  • Admit Card (Offline)- 6 to 7 January 2020
  • Exam Centre Details will be available on 9 January 2020

IIT Hyderabad researcher finds people from rural Bihar migrate to urban areas but do not settle.

Source – indiatoday.in

Dr Amrita Datta, Assistant Professor of Development Studies, Department of Liberal Arts, IIT Hyderabad, has found that 78 per cent of all migrants from Rural Bihar went towards an urban destination. Those in the upper end of the social and economic hierarchy in villages are disproportionately represented in the rural-urban migrations.

Characteristics of migrants

These migrant workers are more educated and tend to step out of the village without having worked at all in the local rural economy. This relatively better off migration stream contrasts with the other, more precarious migration stream in which workers predominantly undertake manual work, and when they migrate, they are more likely to work in rural areas.

Instruments of study

These differentiated migrant labour markets pathway suggest that social and economic hierarchies in source regions are translated in destination regions. Where one is located in the social and economic ladder in the village determines what kind of work she/he will undertake at the destination of migration.

Name of the study

Titled ‘Poverty, Migration and Development in rural Bihar,’ this study was undertaken by Dr Amrita Datta, Assistant Professor of Development Studies, Department of Liberal Arts, IIT Hyderabad. This work has been done in collaboration with the Institute for Human Development, New Delhi and supported by Indian Council of Social Science Research.

Highlighting the importance of such studies, Dr. Amrita Datta said, “This study is important in a context where migration from rural Bihar is significant, but it remains an understudied area of research, and little is known about its magnitude, patterns and processes. The broad objectives of this research were to study the socio-economic attributes of migration; changes in the patterns of migration over time; linkages between poverty, migration and development; shifts in the sources of rural income, and the role of remittances therein.

Dr Amrita Datta added, “Based on a specially-designed migration module, information related to the migration destination was also collected to focus on the linkages between Bihar and rest of the Indian economy as well migrants’ social and political lives at the destination. In addition, data on return migration and permanent migration was also collected.”

Outcomes of study

Another major finding was that 98 per cent of return migrants reported that migration was beneficial.

At the same time, 9 in 10 such migrants did not desire to migrate permanently.

This cannot be seen a paradox, as material gains of migration come at the high cost of separation from family members.

People who participated in the research

A survey-based primary study was undertaken in 12 villages in 7 representative districts of Bihar, viz., Araria, Gaya, Gopalganj, Nalanda, Madhubani, Rohtas, and Purnia.

The current survey covered 9,737 individuals in 1,588 households, of which about two-thirds of the households were also studied earlier in 1998-99 and 2009-11.

Over time, the percentage of households with migrants increased from 45 per cent in 1999 to 62 per cent in 2011 to 65 per cent in 2016.

Thus, data from recent rounds suggest that Bihar’s high rates of migration may be stabilizing.

Source of income

That said, there has been a striking increase in the proportion of long-term migrants in total migrants; more than two-thirds of the migrants had migrated for 10 months or more in the year preceding the survey. These migrants work in a wide variety of occupations, predominantly in urban areas across India in its services-oriented economy in its burgeoning informal sector, and they remain delinked from rural labour markets in source regions.

For rural households, migration of its members is a pathway to higher incomes, and households with migrants reported a higher annual income than households without migrants. More than 90 per cent of all migrants sent remittances, and remittances comprised 55 per cent of the total income of households with migrants. That the share of remittances in total income was relatively higher among the poorer households demonstrates their critical dependence on this income source for their sustenance. Remittances were predominantly used in consumptive expenditures – food, education, health, but also sometimes invested in productive sources.

Low rate of relocation

While migration has increased and become longer-term, it remains circular; migrants eventually return to the village after having worked for a long time in distant labor markets. The survey reveals that permanent migration that entails relocation of the entire household from the village is very low. In the sample, only 39 households had permanently migrated.

What is the relationship between migration and income poverty?

In 2016, migration rates were the lowest in the bottom-most income quintile and kept increasing until the fourth quintile, only to fall again in the top income quintile. Over time, this pattern holds across all three waves: 1999, 2011 and 2016.

Thus, while there appears to be no linear relationship between migration and poverty, the data clearly shows that migration is the lowest among the poorest households.

Poverty, therefore, appears to be a constraining factor in the ability to migrate, at the bottom-most quintile, but not in subsequent income quintiles.

In Bihar Village, Burglars Flee with Gold Worth Lakhs Plucked from 50-feet High Temple Dome.

Source – news18.com

Nawada (Bihar): Unidentified burglars climbed atop a 50 feet high spire of a decrepit temple here and decamped with pieces of gold worth lakhs of rupees, police said here on Saturday.

The pieces of gold were affixed to the temple’s dome, they added.

The incident took place at a temple situated inside an abandoned monastery at Gulani, a remote village under the jurisdiction of Pakribarawan police station of this central Bihar district, said Station House Officer (SHO) Sanjay Kumar.

He said the thieves appeared to be familiar with the topography of the village as well as the temple, said to be “hundreds of years old”, as they sneaked inside in the thick of Friday night taking advantage of the cold, foggy weather and climbed the spire with the help of a rope.

“The monastery’s ‘mahant’ had died some time back and a priest from Siwan district, who was appointed as his successor has so far not bothered to turn up and take charge,” said Kumar.

Hence, the premises were by and large unmanned, he said.

“We suspect that the villagers have a clue about those involved in the burglary and we are interrogating them and hope to crack the case soon,” he added.

Maoists kill two tribal in Bihar branding them police informers.

Source – hindustantimes.com

Maoists on Saturday night killed two tribal in Bihar’s Lakhisarai district on the assumption that they were police informers. In the last 8 months in Bihar, the ultras have killed at least 20 civilians believing them to be spies.

The latest incident took place near the Baskund and Gobardaha villages, under the jurisdiction of Chanan police station in the district. The victims have been identified as Mogal Koda and Sanjay Koda.

Munger range DIG Manu Maharaaj said the two were picked up from their home and taken some distance away before they were gunned down. Locals recovered their bodies lying at two separate places on Sunday morning.

According to the reports, two separate group of Maoists entered the Baskund and Gobardaha villages at 11.50 pm and picked up the duo from their homes.

The outlaws dragged the men out even as their families pleaded the men’s innocence.

Villagers and members of the Koda families said police arrived late despite being informed. The villagers staged protests and demanded the arrest of the accused.

Police said Mogal was abducted from his home and taken to a nearby forest side road and killed.

“Several bullets were pumped into his body. The Maoists later left posters on the spot accusing Mogal of being a police informer,” police sources said.

Eight empty cartridges and two live bullets were recovered from the spot.

In the second incident, Maoist raided Sanjay Koda’s in-law’s house at Gobardaha village, dragged him out on gunpoint and shot him thrice in his chest before escaping.

Police said Sanjay, a resident of Laxmipur village in Jamui, was currently residing at his in-law’s house. Maoists left pamphlets alleging Sanjay and some other villagers had deserted the Maoists and become police informers.

In August 19, two people were gunned down by a group of heavily-armed Maoists under similar suspicion at a crowded market in Mananpur area of Lakhisarai district.

Lakhisarai is one of the four districts in Bihar that are most affected by Left-wing extremism. The other three are Gaya, Aurangabad and Jamui.

On November 8, cadres of the banned CPI (Maoist) killed a man in Aurangabad district after accusing him of being a police informer.

Bihar To Hold Constable Recruitment Exam Next Year.

Source – ndtv.com

Central Selection Board of Constables (CSBC), Bihar will hold the written examination for selection of Constables on January 12 and January 20, 2020. The examination will be OMR-based and will be held in two shifts on each of the two days.

The e-admit cards for candidates who applied for Constable recruitment will be released on the CSBC website on December 30, 2019. On the day of the exam, candidates would need to carry their admit card along with a photo identity card.

In case, the photograph of the candidate on the e-admit card is not clear, they will need to bring two passport size photographs, similar as the one on the application form and clicked within 2 months, to the exam centre.

Candidates who are unable to download their admit cards form the Board’s website for any reason, can collect their admit card from the Board’s office on January 6 and January 7, 2020 between 10 am and 5 pm.

The roll number-wise list of exam venues will be released on CSBC website on January 9, 2020. Candidates are advised to cross-check the same with the venue mentioned on their admit card.

The board has also released OMR-specimen on the website. Candidates can go through the same and practice filling the same to avoid any errors on the day of the exam.

CSBC had announced 11,880 Constable vacancies available with Bihar Police, Bihar Military Police (BMP), Special India Reserve Battalion (SIRB) and Bihar State Industrial Security Battalion (BSISB). The application process was conducted in October.

Bihar Police Constable Admit Card 2019-20 for 11880 Posts to Release on 30 Dec @csbc.bih.nic.in, Exam from 12 Jan.

Source – jagranjosh.com

Bihar Police Constable Admit Card 2019-20: Central Selection Board of Constable (CSBC), Bihar Police has announced the Admit Card Date and Exam Date for the post of Constable, against advertisement number 02/2019. As per the official notice, Bihar Police Constable Exam Admit Card will be released on 30 December 2019 i.e. on Monday on CSBC official website csbc.bih.nic.in. No admit card will be sent through post.

Bihar Police Constable Exam is scheduled to be held on 12 January (Sunday) and 20 January 2020 (Monday) in two shifts.  First shift will start from 10 AM and second shift from 2 PM.  The exam will be conducted for 2 hours. Candidates have to report at 9 AM and 1 PM respectively. Bihar Police Constable Written test will have objective type questions of 100 marks. The level of the exam will be 10+2.

Bihar Police SI Exam will be held on 22 December 2019 (Sunday) at various exam centres of Bihar. The exam will be of 200 marks. There will be 100 questions on General Knowledge and Current Affairs. Candidates will be required to a minimum of 30% marks. The duration of the test is 2 hours.

Candidates who have applied for the exam can download Bihar Police Constable Admit Card from 30 Dec onwards and appear for the on scheduled date and time.

 Candidates should carry their CSBC Constable Admit Card along with a valid photo Id proof at the examination centre.

Candidates who would not be able to download Bihar Police Constable e-Admit Card from official website can get their Bihar Police Constable Admit Card duplicate admit card from CSBC office on 06 and  07 January 2020.

The board will also upload the Roll-Number wise Bihar Police Constable Exam Centre List on its official website.

The exam is being conducted for the recruitment of 11880 posts of Constable in Bihar Police, Bihar Military Police (BMP), Special India Reserve Battalion (SIRB) and Bihar State Industrial Security Battalion (BSISB).