സ്ത്രീകള്‍ എങ്ങിനെ വസ്ത്രം ധരിക്കണം എന്ന് പുരുഷന്‍ നിഷ്ക്കര്‍ഷിക്കുന്നത് ശരിയോ? അല്ലെങ്കില്‍ തിരിച്ചും?

Saturday, October 22, 2011

How to get Aadhaar?

Registration/ Enrollment of Aadhaar Number/ UID Card


The Aadhaar Application Form Can be downloaded and viewed online at

Residents of India need to visit the nearest Enrollment Camp and need to fulfill some formalities (given below) in order to register for an Aadhaar.
  1. Documents Verification.
  2. Biometric Scanning of Ten Fingerprints.
  3. Biometric Scanning of Iris.
  4. Photograph.
Here are some of the stages of enrollment:
1 How to get Aadhaar?
Enrolment Agency Operator
2 How to get Aadhaar?
Resident Provides Verification Document
3 How to get Aadhaar?
Enroler Enters Resident Data
4 How to get Aadhaar?
Resident Validating Data Entry
5 How to get Aadhaar?
Capture of Face Photograph
6 How to get Aadhaar?
Iris Capture
7 8 How to get Aadhaar?
Fingerprints Capture (Left Hand)
7 8 How to get Aadhaar?
Fingerprints Capture (Right Hand)
9 How to get Aadhaar?
Both Thumbprint Capture
10 How to get Aadhaar?
Enroler Signing off with his own finger print
11 How to get Aadhaar?
Resident Receives Acknowledgment
After these stages, residents will get an Aadhaar number within 20 to 30 days.
The following documents are required while applying for aadhaar UID card.
Proof of name and photo identity: (any one from list below)
  • Passport
  • PAN card
  • Ration/PDS photo card
  • Voter ID
  • Driving license
  • Government photo ID cards
  • NREGS job card
  • photo ID issued by recognised educational institute
  • Arms license
  • photo bank ATM card
  • photo credit card
  • pensioner photo card
  • freedom fighter photo card
  • kisan photo passbook
  • CGHS/ECHS photo card
  • Address card having name photo issued bu department of post.
Proof of address: (any one from list below):
  • Passport
  • Bank Statement
  • Passbook
  • Post Office
  • Account Statement/Passbook
  • Ration Card
  • Voter ID /Driving License
  • Government Photo ID cards
  • Electricity Bill (not older than 3 months)
  • Water bill (not older than 3 months)
  • Telephone Landline Bill (not older than 3 months)
  • Property Tax Receipt (not older than 3 months)
  • Credit Card Statement (not older than 3 months)
  • Insurance Policy
  • Signed Letter having Photo from Bank on letterhead
  • Signed Letter having Photo issued by registered Company on letterhead
  • Signed Letter having Photo issued by Recognized Educational Instruction on letterhead
  • NREGS Job Card
  • Arms License
  • Pensioner Card
  • Freedom Fighter Card
  • Kissan Passbook
  • CGHS / ECHS Card
  • Certificate of Address having photo issued by MP or MLA or Group A Gazetted Officer on letterhead
  • Certificate of Address issued by Village Panchayat head or its equivalent authority (for rural areas)
  • Income Tax Assessment Order
  • Vehicle Registration Certificate
  • Registered Sale / Lease / Rent Agreement
  • Address Card having Photo issued by Department of Posts
  • Caste and Domicile Certificate having Photo issued by State Govt.
Proof of DoB (optional) : (any one from list below)
  • Birth Certificate
  • SSLC Book/Certificate
  • Passport
  • Certificate of Date of Birth issued by Group A Gazetted Officer on letterhead



Advantages after getting an Aadhaar Number / UID


The Aadhaar will become the single source of identity verification. Once residents enrol, they can use the number multiple times – they would be spared the hassle of repeatedly providing supporting identity documents each time they wish to access services such as obtaining a bank account, passport, driving license,andso on.
By providing a clear proof of identity, the Aadhaar will also facilitate entry for poor and underprivileged residents into the formal banking system, and the opportunity to avail services provided by the government and the private sector. The Aadhaar will also give migrants mobility of identity.
It will also provide governments with accurate data on residents, enable direct benefit programs, and allow government departments to coordinate investments and share information.
Source : http://www.iaadhaar.com/

Friday, October 21, 2011

Popular Quotations


Hey Ram. —Mahatma Gandhi

Swarajya is my birth right. —Bal Gangadhar Tilak

Aram Haram Hai. —Jawahar Lal Nehru

“We have now to fight for peace with the same courage and deter-mination as we fought against aggression.” —Lal Bahadur Shastri

“……the light that shone in this country was no ordinary light. For that light represented living truth.” —Jawahar Lal Nehru

Jai Jawan Jai Kishan. —Lal Bahadur Shastri

Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan, Jai Vigyan —Atal Behari Vajpayee

Truth and non-violence are my God. —Mahatma Gandhi

Jan Gan Man Adhinayak Jai Hey. —Rabindra Nath Tagore

Dilli Chalo. —Subhash Chandra Bose

And all the men and women merely players. —Shakespeare (As You Like It)

Sweet are the uses of adversity, which like a toad, ugly and Venomous. Wears yet a precious jewel in his head. —Shakespeare (As You Like It)

Better to reign in hell than to serve in heaven. —Milton

Et Tu, Brute ! —Shakespeare (Julius Ceaser)

Good Government is no substitute for self Government. —Morley

Death is the end of life, ah why should life all labour be. —Alfred Tennyson

Full many a gem of purest ray serene, the dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear. —Thomas Gray

And fools, who came to scoff, Remained to pray. —Oliver Goldsmith

“…Seditious fakir striding half-naked up the steps of the Viceroy’s palace there to negotiate and parley on equal terms with the representative of the King Emperor.” —Winston Churchill

“Generations to come, it may be, will scarce believe that such a one as this (Mahatma Gandhi) ever in flesh and blood walked upon this earth.” —Einstein

“Whom the Gods love die young.” —Byron (Don Juan)

“Necessity is the mother of invention.” —Unknown Latin Proverb

“For fools rush in where angels fear to tread.” —Pope

“A single step for a man–a giant leap for mankind.” —Neil Armstrong

“Thank God, I have done my duty.” —Admiral Nelson

“I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and Sweat.” —Winston Churchill

“Man is by nature a political animal.” —Aristotle

“To every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.” —Issaac Newton

Eureke ! Eureka ! —Archimedes

“Let a hundred flowers bloom and let a thousand schools of thought contend.” —Mao Tsetung

“Frailty, thy name is woman.” —Shakespeare (Hamlet)

“Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thoughts.” —Shelley (To a Skylark)

“To maintain a fault known is a double fault.” —John Jewel

“Beauty is truth, truth beauty”—that is all. Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.” —Keats

“Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested.” —Bacon

“Knowledge is power.” —Francis Bacon

“There is no future in any job, the future lies in the man who holds the job.” —G.W. Crane

“Until the day of his death, no man can be sure of his courage.” —Jean Anovilh

“All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.” —George Orwell

“If it were not for hopes, the hearts would break.” —Thomas Fuller

“Freedom is not worth having if it does not include the freedom to wake mistake.” —Mahatma Gandhi

“Hate the sin, love the sinner.” —Mahatma Gandhi

“Facts are facts and will not disappear on account of your likes.” —Jawaharlal Nehru

“The only alternative to co-existence is codestruction.” —Jawaharlal Nehru

“History is moving and it will tend toward hope, or tend toward tragedy.” —George W. Bush

“All great things are simple, and many can be expressed in single words : freedom, justice, honour, duty, mercy, hope.” —Sir Winston Churchill

Grade Pay of Inspector Posts has been allowed by the TribunalOrders of Hon'ble CAT, Ernakulam Bench in OA No.381/2010

The judgment in our Grade Pay case OA No.381/2010 has been published and is available on the CAT website with the following link


In the judgement, the Hon'ble CAT has categorically stated in the second last para No.33 that
".....the case has been considered and the Tribunal is of the considered view that there is no justification in denying the Inspector (Posts) the higher Grade Pay of Rs 4600 when the same is admissible to Inspectors of other Departments with whom parity has been established by the very Sixth Pay Commission vide its report at para 7.6.14 extracted above........"

Extract of some paras of the judgement are reproduced below:



Para 26. From the perusal of the Recommendations of the Pay Commissions it could be easily discerned that the Pay Commissions have suggested certain measures relating to introduction of element of direct recruitment which was conspicuously absent earlier and without which comparison with the Inspectors in other Departments/Ministries could not be made. Once direct recruitment has been introduced, it was to the full satisfaction of the Pay Commission, which had in fact commented, "The Commission is recommending the merger of pre-revised pay scales of Rs 5500 - 9000 and Rs 6500 - 10500 which will automatically bring Inspector (Posts) on par with Assistants in CSS/Inspectors and analogous Posts in CBDT and CBEC."
The import of this observation of the Pay Commission is that the Pay Commission was very much interested to ensure pay parity of Inspector (Post) with Assistants of CSS and Inspectors and analogous posts in CBDT and CBEC. This recommendation of the Pay Commission is in tune with the observations of the Apex Court in the case of State of West Bengal v. West Bengal Minimum Wages Inspectors Association, (2010) 5 SCC 225 wherein it has been stated as under:-
"23. It is now well settled that parity cannot be claimed merely on the basis that earlier the subject post and the reference category posts were carrying the same scale of pay. In fact, one of the functions of the Pay Commission is to identify the posts which deserve a higher scale of pay than what was earlier being enjoyed with reference to their duties and responsibilities, and extend such higher scale to those categories of posts."

Para 27. When the question of pay scale parity is examined, as stated by the Apex court, the Court has to make analysis in respect of factors like the source and mode of recruitment/appointment, qualifications, the nature of work, the value thereof, responsibilities, reliability, experience, confidentiality, functional need, etc. Viewed from this point, first as to the mode of recruitment. As stated earlier, it was at the recommendations of the Fourth Pay Commission, element of Direct Recruitment had been introduced and in fact there has been common examination in respect of inspectors in various departments, including Inspector (Posts). In fact, the statistics furnished by the applicants vide Annexure A-14 which has been rightly highlighted by the Senior Counsel at the time of hearing, would reflect that the cut off marks in respect of Inspector (Posts) is more than the cut of marks of Inspector (Central Excise). Thus, this requirement is fully met with.

Para 30. This Tribunal need not have to labour more to arrive at the finding that the functional responsibilities of the Inspector (Posts) are certainly onerous and evidently, it is on the basis of adequate justification that the successive Pay Commissions have appreciated the need to revise the pay scale of Inspector (Posts).

Para 31. The decision of the Ministry of Finance does not appear to have taken into account the clear recommendation of the Sixth Pay Commission nor for that matter the full justifications given by the Department of Posts.

Para 32. Thus, when the Pay Commission opined that by virtue of merger of the pays scales of Rs 5500 - 9000 and Rs 6500 - 10500, the same would "automatically bring Inspector (Posts) on par with Assistants in CSS/Inspectors and analogous posts in CBDT and CBEC, what it meant was that from hence, Inspector (Posts) would sail in the same boat as his counterparts in the Income Tax Department or Central Excise or Customs Department or for that matter the Assistants in the CSS. "The difference in the grade pay is not one created by the Pay Commission but the same is due to the fact that as late as in 2009, it is the Government of India which had raised the grade pay of the pay scale 6500 - 10500 that existed as on 01-01-2006 vide order dated 13-11-2009, whereby posts which were in the pre-revised scale of Rs 6,500 - 10,500 as on 01-01-2006 and which were granted the normal replacement pay structure of grade pay of Rs 4,200/- in the pay band PB 2 will be granted grade pay of Rs 4600 in the pay band PB 2 corresponding to the pre-revised pay scale of Rs 7450-11500 w/e/f/ 01-01-2006. And, if a post already existed in the pre-revised scale of Rs 7450-11500, the posts being upgraded from the scale of Rs 6500 - 10500 should be merged with the post in the scale of Rs 7450 - 11500/-. In fact had the above enhancement in the grade pay been recommended by the Pay Commission, it would not have omitted to consider such an increase in the grade pay of Inspector (Posts) as well.


Para 33: Thus, within the parameters prescribed by the Apex Court in respect of the powers of the Tribunal in dealing with the fixation of Pay scale the case has been considered and the Tribunal is of the considered view that there is no justification in denying the Inspector (Posts) the higher Grade Pay of Rs 4600 when the same is admissible to Inspectors of other Departments with whom parity has been established by the very Sixth Pay Commission vide its report at para 7.6.14 extracted above. The Department of Post also equally recommends the same and as such, at appropriate level, the Ministry of Finance has to have a re-look in the matter dispassionately and keeping in view the aforesaid discussion. The ASPOs, as a result can be granted a grade pay of Rs.4800/- and the Superintendents grade pay of Rs.5400, as in the case of Superintendents of Central Excise & Customs.

Para 34. In view of the above, the OA is allowed to the extent that keeping in tune with the observations of the Sixth Pay Commission, coupled with the strong recommendations of the Department of Post and also in the light of our discussion as above, first respondent, i.e. the Ministry of Finance shall have a re-look in the matter at the level of Secretary and consider the case of the Inspector (Posts) for upgradation of their grade pay at par with that of the Inspector of income tax, of CBDT and CBEC. This will make the grade pay of Inspector (Posts) at par with that of the promotional post of Assistant Superintendents of Post Offices, it is expedient to consider and upward revision of the grade pay of ASPs as well. All the necessary details and statistics as required by the Ministry of Finance shall be made available by the second Respondent i.e. the Director General of Posts. It is expected that within a reasonable time, the respondents shall arrive at a judicious decision and implement the same.

Further course of cation may be decided collectively so that the desired goal of getting grade pay of Rs.4600 from 01.01.2006 for Inspector Posts can be achieved soon.

Courtesy : http://aipif.blogspot.com/

Railways Take Measures to Prevent Misuse of ‘Tatkal’ Scheme

In order to prevent misuse of ‘Tatkal’ Scheme of reserving train tickets, Indian Railways have taken following measures:-

 With a view to reduce the chances of misuse of e-ticketing facility by IRCTC agent, Indian Railways has decided to stop Quick Book Option and cash card booking between 8 AM to 9 AM. Further, individual users are permitted to book only two tickets between 8 AM to 9 AM.

 Access to ‘Tatkal’ booking to the agents booking through internet has been denied during the opening hours of reservation in the morning between 8 AM to 9 AM.

 The provision of carrying one of the eight prescribed identity cards by any one of the passengers booked on ‘Tatkal’ ticket, introduced from 11th February 2011 to prevent transfer of ‘Tatkal’ tickets.

 Facility of change of name is not permissible on ‘Tatkal’ tickets.

 Regular checks are conducted by senior officials at Reservation Offices particularly during opening hours in the morning to check the activities of touts and other unscrupulous elements.

 The load of IRCTC’s server has been augmented to ensure easy accessibility to passengers booking tickets through internet.

 Refund rules have been made stringent to discourage frivolous and proxy bookings.