Earth Day:Seven Spectacular Places Saved by the Environmental Movement(link)

The first Earth Day, in 1970, was inspired by anger. Four million gallons of oil from a blown offshore well were smearing California beaches. Flames leapt from the surface of Ohio’s Cuyahoga River. 20 million people took to the streets.

Now passion has changed into guilt. Man’s lifestyle habits are causing global climate change, and developing countries want to grow and consume like wealthy nations. Earth Day has become a day for serious introspection and rethinking.

Introspection is healthy within limits. Saving the planet is more complicated now than it seemed 40 years ago. Here are seven examples to be thankful for.

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Regular Practice of Yoga Ensures Physical & Mental Well-Being

It is not right to say that yoga is a trend. However, it is true that yoga is making a healthy comeback. Yoga is more than a science. Practiced more than 5000 years, it is actually an art of living a healthy life. Yoga is not only about physical postures to stay healthy, it puts equal (even more) emphasize on relaxation of mind through some breathing techniques known as Pranayam. Yoga adds to your strength, flexibility and balance whereas meditation keeps your body, mind and soul in perfect harmonious rhythm.

These days, daily routine of the busy bodies have become more hectic with monotonous work pressure on both personal and professional domain. They can hardly manage time to do jogging or swimming to stay fit. A better alternative for them is to practice some indoor activities like yoga and meditation. Here are some in-brief benefits of regular practice of yoga and meditation:

Stay Healthy Always

The proverb goes, ‘Health is Wealth’. You are into money-minting game but are too sick to celebrate the inflow of funds and draining them out for your mounting medical bills. Do you love that? No. Yoga is a good way to ensure well-being of your physical and mental health. It helps you get a shapely figure. But more importantly, it relaxes your mind by eliminating worries for the time being and helps you concentrate on your inner self during that period. It releases toxin and tension that adversely affect your physical and mental health.

It is more common for the professionals to develop clamps and blockages after working for long hours. Those create an obstacle for our body to get sufficient amount of nutrients and oxygen that we need to stay fit and strong. Regular practice of yoga eliminates these obstacles and supplements your body with lost energy.

In the short-run, yoga strengthens your muscles, increases immunity, keeps blood pressure in control and enables you to work more. As far as long-term benefits are concerned, it helps you stay in a healthy shape and look younger even at the age of 60.

Stay Cool and Calm

Yoga session is incomplete without meditation which focuses on slow breathing exercises. The purpose of breathing mechanism is to relax your mind so that you stay focused, can absorb the positives of life and get optimum benefits from the yoga exercises.

Being bogged down by work pressure and no time for relaxation, most of us live a stressful life. Stress on a limited level is not harmful but when it goes beyond the healthy border, it becomes a breeding ground of anger, anxiety, impatience, depression and other negativities.

Yoga and meditation keep the stress factor within permissible limit. If you practice yoga regularly, you will be more calm, focused and disciplined in life. Being relieved of negative factors that cloud your mind, you will be able to set your priorities and implement them in a more planned way.

Be More Productive

When your body is fit and mind is calm, the concerted effort will encourage you to set your goals high and succeed in achieving them. By regularly doing exercises and meditation, you will feel more energetic and that will get reflected in your enhanced productivity.

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India On the Verge to Legally Implement Right to Food

Janina's avatarFood (Policy) For Thought

Here is a mind-boggling Sunday statistic for you: India is estimated to have more undernourished people than all of Sub-Saharan Africa combined. I had to re-read that sentence three times before really grasping its consequences. I think especially in academia, we are now so used to think of India as an “emerging economy”, a “model of growth”, so used to talk about its burgeoning IT sector and to see really smart Indian students join our universities that we forget about the fact that 43.5% of its children under the age of 5 are underweight, and that 19% of the total population is undernourished.

This may however be one of the reasons that my Google alerts to articles mentioning the “right to food” have recently been dominated by articles talking about India, since the country stands closely before a landmark legislation that translates the human right to food into concrete policy.

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Asian Highway Network:A ‘Pathmaking’ Initiative

The Asian Highway (AH) project, also known as the Great Asian Highway, is a cooperative project among countries in Asia and Europe and the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), to improve the highway systems in Asia. It is one of the three pillars of the Asian Land Transport Infrastructure Development (ALTID) project, endorsed by the ESCAP commission at its 48th session in 1992, comprising Asian Highway, Trans-Asian Railway (TAR) and facilitation of land transport projects.

Agreements have been signed by 32 countries to allow the highway to cross the continent and also reach to Europe. Some of the countries taking part in the highway project are India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, China, Japan, South Korea and Bangladesh. Most of the funding comes from the larger, more advanced Asian nations like Japan, India and China as well as international agencies such as the Asian Development Bank. Asian Highway network is a network of 141,000 kilometers of standardized roads and highways crisscrossing 32 Asian countries with linkages to Europe.

Map of the highways

The  project was initiated in 1959 with the aim of promoting the development of international road transport in the region. During the first phase of the project (1960-1970) considerable progress was achieved, but, progress slowed down when financial assistance was suspended in 1975.

Entering into the 1980s and 1990s, regional political and economic changes accelerated  momentum for the Asian Highway Project. It became one of the three pillars of Asian Land Transport Infrastructure Development (ALTID) project, endorsed by ESCAP Commission at its forty-eight session in 1992, comprising Asian Highway, Trans-Asian Railway and facilitation of land transport projects.

A total of US$26 billion has  been invested in the improvement and upgrading of the Asian Highway network. However, there is still a shortfall of US$18 billion. UNESCAP secretariat is now working with its member countries to identify financial sources for the development of the network to improve their road transport capacity and efficiency.

The Trans Asian Highways Network is now becoming a reality. In most countries the construction and preparation for the network have been completed. In Manipur too, along the Moreh-Imphal-Mao stretch of the National Highway, NH2 we can now see the road signs of Asian Highway, AH1 along the road sides.

It was after the Agreements have been signed by 32 countries to allow the highway to cross the continent and also reach to Europe. Some of the countries taking part in the highway project are Japan, China, South Korea, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. It is mostly funded by the larger, more advanced Asian countries like Japan, China and India as well as international agencies such as the Asian Development Bank.

_The AH project was first initiated by the United Nations in 1959 with the aim of promoting the development of international road transport in the region. The first phase of the project was carried out from 1960 to 1970 with considerable progress. However, the progress slowed down when financial assistance was suspended in 1975.

Later, ESCAP has conducted several projects in cooperation with AH member countries step by step after the endorsement of ALTID in 1992. On the other hand, there were scepticisms from some transportation experts were prominent the mid-2000s about the viability of the project given the economic and political situations in both South and Southeast Asia.

Now, the Asian Highway Network is marked with AH1 to AH88. AH1 is the longest route of the Asian Highway Network, running 20,557 km (12,845 miles) from Tokyo, Japan via Korea, China, Southeast Asia, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran to the border between Turkey and Bulgaria west of Istanbul where it joins end-on with European Route E80.

The Progress So Far

In Japan, the 1200-kilometer (750-mile) stretch was added to the system in November 2003. It runs along the following tolled expressways: Shuto Expressway C1 Inner Circular Route, Edobashi JCT to Tanimachi JCT via Takebashi JCT; Shuto Expressway Route 3 Shibuya Line, Tanimachi JCT to Yoga Exit (Tokyo Interchange); Tomei Expressway, Tokyo Interchange to Komaki; Meishin Expressway, Komaki to Suita via Kyoto; Chugoku Expressway, Suita to Kobe; San`yo Expressway, Kobe to Yamaguchi via Hiroshima; Chugoku Expressway, Yamaguchi to Shimonoseki; Kanmonkyo Bridge, Shimonoseki to Kitakyushu; Kyushu Expressway, Kitakyushu to Fukuoka; Fukuoka Expressway Route 4; Fukuoka Expressway Route 1; From Fukuoka, AH1 takes the Camellia Line ferry to Busan, South Korea. The Japan–Korea Undersea Tunnel has been proposed to provide a fixed crossing.

The AH1 stretch in South Korea mainly follows the Gyeongbu Expressway and consists of Chungjangno: Busan Port (Jung-gu, Busan) – Dong-gu, Busan This line is a part of Busan city route 71; Beonyeonno: Dong-gu, Busan – Guseo IC (Geumjeong-gu, Busan) and this line is also known as Busan 1st Urban Expressway and a part of Busan city route 11; Gyeongbu Expressway (Express route 1): Guseo IC (Geumjeong-gu, Busan) – Yangjae IC (Seocho-gu, Seoul); Former Gyeongbu Expressway: Yangjae IC (Seocho-gu, Seoul) – Hannam IC (Gangnam-gu, Seoul); Hannamro: Hannam IC (Gangnam-gu, Seoul) – Hannam Bridge – Yongsan-gu, Seoul This line is a part of Seoul city route 41; Namsan 1st tunnel: Yongsan-gu – Jung-gu; Toegyero: Jung-gu – Seoul Station (Jung-gu); Uijuro: Seoul Station (Jung-gu, Seoul) – Eunpyeong-gu, Seoul This line is a part of Seoul city route 21; Tongilro: Eunpyeong-gu, Seoul – Panmunjeom (Paju, Gyeonggi-do).

In North Korea, AH1 stretches over P`anmunjom – Kaesong – P`yongyang – Sinuiju.

In China, the AH1 consists of G11:Dandong – Shenyang; G1: Shenyang- Beijing; G4 Beijing – Shijiazhuang – Zhengzhou – Xinyang – Wuhan – Changsha – Guangzhou; G4 Branch from Guangzhou to Shenzhen (adjacent to Hong Kong); G80: Guangzhou – Nanning; G72: Nanning – Youyiguan.

In Vietnam, Route 1A: H? Chí Minh City – Biên Hòa – Nha Trang – H?i An – Ðà N?ng – Hu? – Ðông Hà – Ð?ng H?i – Vinh – Hà N?i; Route 22: M?c Bài – H? Chí Minh City; Route 279: Ð?ng Ðang – H?u Ngh? Quan and Route 51: Branch from Biên Hòa to Vung Tàu form the part of AH1.

In Cambodia, Route 1: Bavet – Phnom Penh and Route 5: Phnom Penh – Poipet make the AH1.

In Thailand, Route 33: Aranyaprathet – Kabin Buri – Hin Kong; Route 1: Hin Kong – Bang Pa In; Route 1: Branch: Bang Pa In – Bangkok; Route 32: – Bang Pa In – Chai Nat; Route 1: Chai Nat – Tak and Route 12: Tak – Mae Sot complete the AH1.

In Myanmar, the AH1 draws on National Highway 8 Myawaddy – Payagyi; National Highway 1 Branch from Payagyi to Yangon and National Highway 1 Payagyi – Meiktila – Mandalay – Tamu.

In India, the AH1 extends along Moreh – Imphal – Kohima – Dimapur; Dimapur – Nagaon; Nagaon – Numaligarh – Jorabat; Jorabat – Shillong – Dawki; (Branch from Jorabat to Guwahati Petrapole – Barasat; Barasat – Kolkata; Kolkata – Durgapur – Barhi – Kanpur – Agra – New Delhi and New Delhi – Attari.

In Bangladesh, N2 Tamabil – Sylhet – Katchpur – Dhaka; N4 Dhaka–Tangail; N405 Tangail–Kamarkhanda; N704 Kamarkhanda–Jessore; N706 Jessore – Benapole make the AH1.

In Pakistan, AH1 draws Wagah — Lahore; N-5 National Highway – Lahore – Gujranwala – Jhelum – Rawalpindi – Peshawar – Torkham and Khyber Pass

In Afghanistan, A01 Jalalabad – Kabul – Kandahar – Delaram – Herat – Islam Qala cover AH1.

In Iran, Road 36 : Islam Qala – Taybad; Road 97 : Taybad- Sang Bast; Road 44: Sang Bast – Shahrood – Damghan – Semnan – Tehran; Freeway 2: Tehran – Qazvin – Tabriz and Road 32: Tabriz – Bazargan AH1.

In Turkey, AH1 consists of E80 D.100 Gürbulak (Iran border) – Dogubayazit – Askale – Refahiye – Sivas; E88 D.100 Sivas – Ankara; E89 O-4 Ankara – Gerede – Istanbul; E80 O-2 Istanbul – Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge; E80 O-3 Istanbul – Edirne; E80 D.100 Edirne – Kapikule; E80 (Bulgaria border) 41°43`5?N 26°21`7.7?E. The route AH1 is also marked as E80 in Turkey. The E80 continues in the E-road network from the border station at Kapitan Andreevo/Kapikule to Sofia in Bulgaria, followed by E80 highways to Niš, Pristina, Dubrovnik, Pescara, Rome, Genoa, Nice, Toulouse, Burgos, Valladolid, Salamanca and finally Lisbon on the Atlantic Ocean.

The AH2 is a road in the Asian Highway Network running 13,177 km (8230 miles) from Denpasar, Indonesia to Khosravi, Iran. The AH2 also passes through Manipur.

Now, the Trans Asian Highways’ two important roads are passing through Manipur. However, the pertinent questions before the Government of Manipur, its peoples, Civil Society Organisations, the academic and intellectuals are – Are people prepared for the social and economic impacts the Trans Asian Highways may give? Are we prepared to tap the advantages from the two Trans Asian Highways? Are we destined to be just swept away by the Trans Asian Highways? Are we limited to be just bystanders alongside the Trans Asian Highways?

Sources:ESCAP

here  Wikipedia

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