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Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde and Chhattisgarh chief
minister Raman Singh paid tribute to 11 CRPF jawans who were among 16 people
killed in a Naxal ambush in Jagdalpur.
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Speaking to reporters after paying tribute, Mr Shinde
vowed revenge for the attack.
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The Home Minister said that contrary to reports, there
was no specific intelligence input about the attack.
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With the general election round the corner, the Centre
has decided to send additional forces to the state, which votes on April 10
and 17.
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On 11th of March, 70-100 well-armed Naxals ambushed a
joint 50-member joint team of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and
the state police, leading to a three-hour gun battle. 15 jawans and a
civilian were killed.
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A review of standard operating procedures and the
deployment pattern in the state, considered a Maoist stronghold, is expected
to follow but questions about frequent lapses on part of the security forces
will continue to haunt the government.
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Human development indicators across the poorer States
with a high concentration of marginalised groups are catching up with the
national average, according to the latest figures released by the Institute
of Applied Manpower Research (IAMR) under the Planning Commission. The data
suggest that these socially disadvantaged groups are starting to share
benefits of the process of human development.
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However, when comparing the Scheduled Castes and the
Scheduled Tribes with Muslims in terms of human development input and
outcome indicators, Muslims have consistently improved better than other
marginalised groups.
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The eight poorer States — Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand,
Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand — are home
to nearly 48 per cent of all the SCs, 52 per cent of all the STs and 44 per
cent of all Muslims in the country.
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The report — an updated version of the Human Development
Report-2011: Towards Social Inclusion — ranks Delhi, Kerala, Himachal
Pradesh, Haryana and Punjab among the best performing States in human
development indicators, while Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand
and Odisha are the worst performers. Most other States, including Gujarat,
have more or less remained the same.
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Two Indian CEOs have been named among America's most
powerful CEOs under the age of 40 - who head publicly-traded companies with
highest market values - in the Forbes magazine list that is topped by Google
CEO and co-founder Larry Page.
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Website hosting company Endurance International Group CEO
and founder Hari K Ravichandran (38) has been ranked 19th, while asset
management firm Altisource Asset Management (AAMC) CEO Ashish Pandey (38) is
ranked 20th.
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The 20 CEOs on the list head publicly-traded companies
with the highest market capitalisations.
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For the third consecutive year, Page has topped the list.
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The youngest CEO on the list is Facebook founder Mark
Zuckerberg, 29, remains in the second place.
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For the second consecutive year, Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer,
38, holds third place and remains the only woman on this list.
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Eight CEOs are new to the list this year, including
Burger King Worldwide head Daniel Schwartz, 33, who is one of the youngest
on the list.
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