Vodafone opens all-women store in Hyderabad

An all-women Vodafone Angel Store opened for business in Hyderabad on Tuesday. -- P. V..Sivakumar / The Hindu
An all-women Vodafone Angel Store opened for business in Hyderabad on Tuesday. — P. V..Sivakumar / The Hindu

Hyderabad : 

Vodafone India launched its first store run and managed entirely by women employees in Andhra Pradesh in Hyderabad today.

This is the 13th such store of the company and operates under the brand name ‘Vodafone Angel Store’.

“We have launched this concept as part of our commitment to women empowerment. We are opening one store in each State and will subsequently expand the network,” Mandeep Singh Bhatia, Business Head-Andhra Pradesh, said.

Right from security to management-level personnel, these stores have all-women staff. Women employees constitute about 13 per cent of the company’s total staff.

Bhatia said its current subscriber base in the State was about six million. “We have achieved about 75 per cent coverage across the State through 8,300 towers,” he said adding that it did not have immediate plans to expand its tower network.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> News> National / by The Hindu Bureau   amitmitra@thehindu.co.in /  Hyderabad, April 09th, 2013

Beltek introduces vitamin rich ‘Wild Water’ in Andhra Pradesh

Beltek Canadian Water Limited has introduced vitamin enriched ‘Wild Water’ for the first time in Andhra Pradesh. The vitamin enriched Wild Water promises to nourish people with all the necessary vitamins like Vitamin A, B & C along minerals like Zinc.

The demand for pure water with all ingredients is growing in Andhra Pradesh. There are numerous tiny water plants that have mushroomed in every street doing crores of rupees of business annually. Many are unregistered and follow no proper quality and safety measures.

Having realised the growing demand for enriched water, Beltek Canadian Water Limited has introduced this life style beverage which promises to nourish with natural flavours, natural colours, and the goodness of Vitamins.

The Wild Water is available in three flavours which include Tropical citrus, flavoured energise, lemon flavoured reload and dragon fruit flavoured Immunity. Wild Water has no preservatives, has low sugar and focuses on tasty hydration thus meeting the needs of calorie-conscious consumers. With no seasonality factor the all weather lifestyle drink Wild-Water not only provides a dose of vitamins it is also prepared with finest ingredients from USA, contains mouth-watering flavours that shine through as well as maintains International Quality Standard.

Steve Verma, Director, Beltek Canadian Water Limited said, “Till now Vitamin Enriched Water has only been available outside India. Wild Water with its goodness is an entirely new category in the Rs. 300 Crore (excluding energy drink) Indian functional drink arena. The Natural flavoured water with the goodness of Vitamins is the best thing people can get today even internationally.”

While Tropical Citrus flavoured energise comes with the benefit of Vitamins C & B along with Guarana extracts, Lemonade flavoured reload is available with the benefits of Vitamins A, B & C along with electrolytes and the Dragon Fruit flavoured Immunity with Vitamin B, C & Zinc.

Available at an attractive price of Rs. 70, Wild Water is already present in leading stores of Delhi/ NCR and soon will be entering other Indian cities. The company has signed upcoming Indian film and stage actor Shazahn Padamsee as the brand ambassador to promote Wild Water.

Each batch of Wild Water undergoes a rigorous test procedure to maintain International Standard quality and excellence. The concoction has been formulated with the least possible amount of Pure Cane Sugar, is an excellent healthy alternative to sweetened juices, colas and fizzy drinks.

source: http://www.pharmabiz.com / PharmaBiz / Home> Top News> Product Launches / by the PharmaBiz Bureau team / Hyderabad, Tuesday – April 09th, 2013

Switzerland invites Indian investments

 

Switzerland Consul General Rolf Frei interacting with investors at a seminar in Visakhapatnam on Wednesday. /.  Photo: K.R. Deepak / The Hindu
Switzerland Consul General Rolf Frei interacting with investors at a seminar in Visakhapatnam on Wednesday. /. Photo: K.R. Deepak / The Hindu

Visakhapatnam : 

Visakhapatnam, as a fast-developing city, can look to Switzerland and the local companies can form joint ventures with Swiss companies in many sectors to mutual advantage, Bangalore-based Consulate General of Switzerland Rolf Frei has said.

He was interacting with local industrialists and investors at a session organised here on Wednesday evening by the Vizagapatam Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

On his maiden visit to the city, he said that he was very impressed with the facilities and the beauty of the city.

“The way I am being received is quite amazing. The city and its people are very warm and beautiful. When my flight was landing, I was thrilled to see the panoramic view of the blue waters of Bay of Bengal and the hills,” he said.

He said the Switzerland Government was looking at strengthening the bilateral ties in trade and commerce. The Consulate office was opened in Bangalore two years ago recognising the immense investment potential in and from South India.

Frei said the Government was looking at investment opportunities in tourism, infrastructure, information and communication technology, retail, life-sciences, clean technologies, research and development and education.

“Many from South India are investing in Switzerland because it’s the gateway to Europe and has excellent infrastructure and tax incentives,” he stated.

Biotech and IT offices have been opened with an investment of $1 billion by Indians in Switzerland. The Swiss investment in India is of the order of $4 billion. “We have made a big Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in India,” he said.

Thirty Indian companies with interest in Europe have so far opened their offices in Switzerland. “We have stable political environment, skilled manpower and excellent infrastructure. Low taxes are the main attraction,” he said.

Frei said 20 to 30 per cent of foreign tourists, who visit Switzerland every year, were from India. “Our tourist spots, round the year particularly in summer from May to September offer a fabulous experience to tourists. Every, at least 20-30 Indian films are shot in Switzerland. It is a favourite spot with Indian film makers,” he remarked.

Chamber President K. Ramabrahmam, Symbiosys CEO O. Naresh Kumar, and others spoke on the advantages of investing in Visakhapatnam and urged the Consul-General to bring in a delegation of Swiss industrialists and others the next time with him to showcase Vizag.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> News> Economy / by CH. R. S. Sarma  sarma.rs@thehindu.co.in / Visakhapatnam, March 21st, 2013

Hyderabadi kid at Intel Science Fair

Prithvi’s project was one of the three projects selected out of 289 entries for representing Singapore at The Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, which is the world’s largest international pre-college science competition.
Prithvi’s project was one of the three projects selected out of 289 entries for representing Singapore at The Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, which is the world’s largest international pre-college science competition.

An alumnus of Hyderabad Public School(HPS), Begumpet, G Prithvi, 17 will be representing Singapore in The Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, which will be held in Phoenix, Arizona, USA from May 12 to 17.

Prithvi’s project was one of the three projects selected out of 289 entries for representing Singapore at the fair, which is the world’s largest international pre-college science competition. The fair provides an annual forum for more than 1,500 high school students from about 70 countries, regions, and territories to showcase their independent research as they compete for over $3 million annually. The Intel ISEF is the premier global science competition for students in grades 9-12.

Talking of his achievement, Prithvi says, “The recognition is the result of hours of my work, and it is the first success towards fulfilling my ambition to be scientist.”

Prithvi now lived in Singapore with his parents and is currently class 12 at St. Andrews Junior College, Singapore. His ambition is to become a scientist and do research in Particle Physics.

Prithvi was working on research into high performance anodes for Lithium ion batteries using Cobalt compounds obtained by bulk preparation methods at National University of Singapore, and the project was selected for participation in the Singapore Science and Technology fair held recently.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Express Features – Hyderabad / April 09th, 2013

Music for a cause

The three day programme witnessed a host of classical music and dance programmes featuring veteran artists | EPS
The three day programme witnessed a host of classical music and dance programmes featuring veteran artists | EPS

The Suranjali foundation had organised the Tata Capital Pt Bhimsen Joshi National Festival of Music and Dance from April 5 to 7 at the Shilpa Kala Vedika at Madhapur. The three day programme witnessed a host of classical music and dance programmes featuring veteran artists like Shashank Subramanyam, Shobhana and Pt Hari Prasad Chaurasia. Being conducted for the second time, the national festival was conceptualised to provide a helping hand to autistic children. With last year being a success, the festival has now been made an annual feature.

Besides being a fund raiser, Secretary General of the foundation, Abhijit Bhattacharjee added that the festival also provides a platform to for Indian musicians to perform and interact with their audience.Other artists who performed at the festival included Purbayan Chatterjee, the sitarist, who performed a jugalbandi with Shashank Subramanyam on the Flute. Vocalist Begum Parween Sutan, Kuchipudi dancer Shallu Jindal and sitarist Pt Budhaditya Mukherjee also enthralled the audience with their art. The festival was concluded on Sunday with the doible treat of the danseuse Shobhana and flautist Pt.Hari Prasad Chaurasia.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Express Features – Hyderabad / April 08th, 2013

‘India undergoing 5 revolutions now’

Hyderabad :

Hinting that India was a tough country in which to do business, eminent historian RamachandraGuha said if he were an entrepreneur, he would have liked to have been born in a country like Singapore or Sweden.

Addressing graduates of the Indian School of Business on its 12th Graduation Day on Sunday, Guha referred to his book , ‘Makers of Modern India’ and said India was undergoing five dramatic revolutions ‘simultaneously’. “India is experiencing a national revolution as from being a colonised colony, the country is emerging as an independent nation. Second is the democratic revolution, as in our country we still hold general elections and not the ‘election of generals’ that takes place in neighbouring countries,” he said. “We are also going through an industrial revolution as the country is transforming from an agrarian economy to an industrial one. There is an urban revolution as people are migrating to cities in massive numbers. Finally, there is a social revolution, where India is coping up with issues of hierarchy and patriarchy,” he added. The historian urged the ISB grads to try and experience the democratic and social revolutions closely as by virtue of being MBAs, they would naturally be part of the other transformations.

Addressing the ISB pass-outs, Kishore Mahbubani, dean and professor in the Practice of Public Policy,  Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore said: “MBAs are one the major reasons due to which there are lesser number of wars in this world today as MBAs are taught to carve out a ‘win-win’ strategy while a war is always a ‘lose-lose’ strategy.” “This generation has the least prospect of dying in a war. The other good news is that countries will be able to halve global poverty by 2015 and the middle class is expanding rapidly and in Asia alone, the middle class base will expand to 1.75 billion people in 2020 from the current 500 million,” he said. On problems, he said the biggest worry was that the 193 countries in the world were no longer isolated entities and each and every action of a single country could create ripples in other nations.

ISB’s 12th Graduation Day saw 565 students of the post graduate programme class of 2013 and 59 students of the PGP-MAX class of 2012 pass out.

Referring to world trends, Mahbubani said there were ‘good news, problems and solutions’ in the present day world.

According to him, there was certain ‘good news’ for young people. “This generation has the least prospect of dying in a war. The other good news is that countries will be able to halve global poverty by 2015 and the middle class is expanding rapidly and in Asia alone, the middle class base will expand to 1.75 billion people in 2020 from the current 500 million,” he said.On problems, he said the biggest worry was that the 193 countries in the world were no longer isolated entities and each and every action of a single country could create ripples in other nations. According to him, the solution was in the strengthening the world bodies such as United Nations  and World Health Organization  that can help bind the world and address the issues of the world in a holistic manner.

source: http://www.articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / Home> City> Hyderabad / TNN / April 08th, 2013

Ramesh Hospitals ties up with Piramal Group

Expanding footprint: P. Ramesh Babu, Managing Director of Ramesh Hospitals, flanked by Yogita Jadav, Senior Vice-President of Piramal Group's India Venture Trust, and P. Ravi Kiran, Chief Financial Officer, at a press conference in Vijayawada on Monday. – Photo: V. Raju / The Hindu
Expanding footprint: P. Ramesh Babu, Managing Director of Ramesh Hospitals, flanked by Yogita Jadav, Senior Vice-President of Piramal Group’s India Venture Trust, and P. Ravi Kiran, Chief Financial Officer, at a press conference in Vijayawada on Monday. – Photo: V. Raju / The Hindu

Vijayawada :

Ramesh Hospitals here, which specialises in cardiac care, has tied up with the Piramal group to extend its services to other towns and semi-urban areas in Andhra Pradesh. It is also constructing a 350-bed hospital in Guntur, according to Ramesh Babu, the promoter.

At a press meet here on Monday, Ramesh Babu said he had set up the hospital 25 years ago and for the first time brought advanced equipment and expert cardiac care to the city. “We have two hospitals here and are proposing to set up another one in Guntur. We also have a satellite centre at Eluru in West Godavari and we have several tele medicine centres,” he said.

With a view to extending medical services to other areas, he said the group had tied up with India Venture Advisors Pvt Ltd of the Piramal group, and the company had picked up stake in Ramesh Hospitals. However, he said the details were being worked out and he could not specify the stake at this juncture.

He said the hospital had treated over 5 lakh patients in Krishna, Guntur, Godavari, Prakasam, Khammam, and Nalgonda districts over the past 25 years. It also offered a diploma course in clinical cardiology to general physicians concentrating on research. “We have plans to set up a medical college,” he said.

P. Ravi Kiran, Chief Financial Officer of Ramesh Hospitals, said roughly Rs 50 crore would be spent on the hospital coming up at Guntur and “our ultimate aim is to increase the bed strength to 1,000 in the next four years or so.”

Yogita, Vice-President of India Advisors Pvt Ltd, said the company was managing funds close to Rs 400 crores and it had launched another healthcare and life sciences fund of Rs 500 crore recently. “Ramesh Hospitals is the first one we have tied up with in Andhra Pradesh and it will give us access to extend our services to coastal Andhra Pradesh,” she said.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> News> National / The Hindu Bureau  – sarma.rs@thehindu.co.in / Vijayawada, April 08th, 2013

Mobile app to combat film piracy launched

A mobile phone application that helps combat film piracy designed by Andhra Pradesh Film Chamber of Commerce with the support of the US Consulate General, was launched by US Ambassador to India Nancy J Powell here today.

The application called ‘Indian Movie Cop'(IMC), available as a free download on Mac’s App Store, provides movie fans with a one-stop shop of movie trailers, plot synopses, theatres and show times and educates them about piracy and enables them to report piracy in real time in one of eight Indian languages.

It provides tools to identify, report and prevent piracy, and those users alerting about the piracy will be rewarded, an official said.

As per a Northbridge Capital Asia report, the Indian film industry estimated to be worth Rs 14,400 crore produces around 1,050 films every year, but loses 14 per cent of its revenue to video piracy, Andhra Pradesh Director General of Police V Dinesh Reddy said.

“About 90 per cent of pirated DVDs of films available in Indian market are a result of illegal camcorder recording in theatres,” the DGP said.

Veteran film maker Daggubati Rama Naidu said, “As a film industry, we have been waging a war against piracy for many years. Indian Movie Cop is a significant step to producing long-term results and bringing all stakeholders together.”

Uday Singh, managing Director of Motion Picture Association (India) said that the new mobile application will help law enforcement officials and movie going audiences to understand the negative impact of content theft and help build a platform for respecting content creators and owners.

CID Additional Director General of Police T Krishna Prasad said information on piracy given by the movie goers through the IMC to the AP Film Chamber of Commerce will be processed before it is taken up as an actionable intelligence.

“That information has to be processed before we take an actionable intelligence. In order to ensure convictions (of the accused), we will be looking for admissible evidence in the form of IP addresses and transfer of technology,” he explained.

source: http://www.business-standard.com / Business Standard / Home> PTI Stories> Entertainment> News / Press Trust of India / Hyderabad, April 07th, 2013

Playing with poetry

Literary fests are the ‘in’ thing today. It makes front page headlines and are thronged by the glitterati and the literati of the art circles. It’s no wonder then that even in Hyderabad, a small section of poetry lovers are enthusiastically promoting poetry clubs that are steadily seeing a growing number of loyalists. Hyderabad,especially the Old City are, has always been a hotspot for the mushaira culture. A few English sessions on poetry featuring established poets  reciting their verses, was the stuff of legends back in the day. The new- age poetry clubs in the city however, cater to not just those who are established, but to closet poets as well, who’re waiting to be discovered by the world, and who don’t restrict themselves to style, form or language!

At Lamakaan, a cultural space in the city, a mixed bunch of people — youngsters and adults, working professionals and homemakers — all with a common love for poetry, gather for ‘Jashn – A Celebration of Women  Poets.’ The event is a reading by poets from varied backgrounds, who are celebrated in the local, national and in a few cases, on an international level too. With their views firmly rooted in feminism, they start reciting poems in English, Urdu and Telugu. At the same venue, a kavi sangamam, an interactive poetry forum , by Telugu poet Kavi Yakoob also makes its presence felt. Not too far away, at a bookstore, Linda Ashok, a young publisher, organises her session of the poetry club called the Red Leaf Poetry Club which attracts young and old poets. Come summer and a workshop on Telugu poetry for kids will be hosted by Sowmya Mittala, a Telugu writer. So, it’s safe to say that the next couple of months in the city are going to be poetic.

Filling the verse void 
The fact that there is a dearth of poetry clubs in a city known for its rich cultural past is what prompted enthusiasts to start poetry clubs. Young professional Masooma Ali’s idea of a session on women’s poetry was initially a part of the Women’s March programme. She wanted to bring together women from varied backgrounds together on a platform for poets reciting in English, Urdu and Telugu. The event turned out to be a success and she now plans to make it a monthly affair. “There was a complete void of a multilingual platform for poetry. There are mushairas, but forums bringing poets from varied backgrounds together was missing. We wanted to provide that interesting mix to people,” she says.

For Linda Ashok, a young publisher from Kolkata, who moved to the city a couple of years ago, it was a culture shock to find no poetry clubs in Hyderabad. “Kolkata has a lot of poetry clubs, so when I first came here, I was disappointed that there were none here and that’s when I decided I’ll start one myself,” says Ashok, who along with two of her friends  — Subhorup Dasgupta and Nivedita Narsapuram — started Red Leaf Poetry, which has seen a steady increase in the number of participants — the youngest poet being only 12 year old — ever since its inception  in January.

Seeing an acute lack of platform for budding poets from different professional backgrounds, Kavi Yakoob, a telugu poet and associate professor of Telugu at Anwar ul Uloom degree College, inititated a kavi sangamam. “There is a lot of talent amongst young engineers and doctors, who never get the exposure and encouragement to showcase their poetic skills. So, I decided to create a platform for young, enthusiastic poets to meet like-minded people and share a few verses.”

Style of poetry 
What’s interesting is that many young poets are moving away from the conventional forms of poetry. While free verse was popular in the past, new ways of depicting imagery are being discovered. Yakoob says, “With globalisation, poets are exposed to different styles of writing which they tend to incorporate in their poems that reflect their moods.” At Jashn, poets were seen reciting ghazals in English that followed the Urdu meter. Interestingly, there was also a theatrical recitation of poems.

Grab ’em young
In a bid to make poetry more attractive to children, Sowmya Nittala, a Telugu writer, has plans on conducting a workshop to introduce Telugu poetry to children. Sowmya says the idea came to her when her mother, a music teacher, included poetic verse as a part of the music lessons. “The tradition of satakam padyalu and vemana padyalu sees poems filled with morals and stories for children. Kids aren’t taught these things anymore and I want to introduce them to the beauty of Telugu verse, through a workshop,” she says.

Taking poetry forward
Kavi Yakoob and Linda Ashok  also have plans of releasing an anthology of the works of participants. “We all have opinions on what’s happening around us and poetry is a great form of expression. It’s a tool for soft diplomacy — a poetic means of protest. It just needs to be polished and put out there,” says Linda, adding, “I was watching a scene from this Korean film which had a huge billboard that said ‘Poetry Fest coming soon’.That got me thinking… although literary fests rule the roost, there must come a day when poetry is given the same importance .”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Life & Style> Books / by Afrin Humayon, TNN / April 08th, 2013

Man’s gift to beast in the heart of the forest

 

The Kawal Tiger Reserve has immense potential to become a base for tigers.. / The Hindu
The Kawal Tiger Reserve has immense potential to become a base for tigers.. / The Hindu

Jannaram (Andhra Pradesh) :

As you drive through the dusty, dense Kawal Tiger Reserve in Andhra Pradesh’s Adilabad district, it does not take long to hear the jungle’s rhapsody.

Bison, sambar, wild boars and deer can be seen near water bodies, as spotted deer gallop amidst tall teak trees and dry grass.

An initiative undertaken by the World Wild Life Fund and the Andhra Pradesh Forest Department here has come to be a blessing for the animals in the reserve. It provides drinking water using automatic solar pumps.

Regular behavioural patterns of the animals were closely monitored before deciding to install the solar pumps.

As the sun rises and bright rays fall on panels, the submersible pump switches on by itself and shuts off when the sun sets. Each pump evacuates about 30,000 litres of water a day. Of this, 5,000 litres are stored in the overhead tank and the rest flows to the percolation tank. That is where the animals come to drink water.

S. V. Kumar, Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, A. V. Joseph, Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, Wild Life Warden, of Andhra Pradesh, travelled into the heart of the forest to commission the solar projects. Joseph told Business Line that the forest reserve has immense potential to become a base for tigers. Now, we have good number of herbivores and small carnivores and occasionally big animals come in here; it won’t be long before visits by bigger ones increase, he said.

VIABLE SINK

It was notified as a tiger reserve in 2012 and is seen as a viable sink for dispersing tigers. The reserve has a corridor linking tiger landscapes such as the Tadoba-Andhari tiger reserve about 100 km in the north, and Indravati tiger reserve, 150 km to the east.

The tiger reservoir is spread over about 900 sq. km., along with a buffer area of about 1,123 sq. km. It has a splendid montage of habitat that supports the rare assemblage of four Indian antelopes — nilgai, chousinga, chinkara and black buck. The forest is also home to nearly 250 species of birds.The forest authorities are enlisting local tribals to serve in the forest, and once the reserve gets popular, it will provide more job opportunities.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> News ? by V. Rishi Kumar  rishikumar.vundi@thehindu.co.in / Jannaram (Andhra Pradesh) – April 07th, 2013