A) India’s GDP to grow 11% in FY 2022, aided by V-shaped recovery: Economic Survey.
India’s economic growth is likely to rebound with a 11% growth in the next financial year as it makes a ‘V-shaped’ recovery after suffering a pandemic-led carnage, according to the Pre-Budget Economic Survey, released on Friday. It needs to be kept in mind, however, that the GDP is projected to contract by a record 7.7% in the current fiscal ending March 31, 2021. This means that the 11% growth projection is on a much smaller base. India’s last annual contraction was in 1979-80, when the GDP shrank by 5.2%. The Economic Survey 2020-21 said the agriculture sector was the only silver lining while services, manufacturing and construction were most hit by the lockdown. After an estimated 7.7% pandemic-driven contraction in 2020-21, India’s real GDP is projected to record a growth of 11.0% in 2021-22 and nominal GDP by 15.4%. These conservative estimates reflect upside potential that can manifest due to the continued normalisation in economic activities as the rollout of Covid-19 vaccines gathers traction, the Survey said. The growth will be further supported by supply-side push from reforms and easing of regulations, push for infrastructural investments, boost to manufacturing sector through the Productivity Linked Incentive Schemes, recovery of pent-up demand for services, and increase in discretionary consumption subsequent to roll-out of the vaccine, it said. The survey, tabled in Parliament by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, said there was likely to be a fiscal slippage during the year based on the available trends for April to November 2020. India is expected to witness a current account surplus during the current financial year after a gap of 17 years, the report said.
B) Unrest at Singhu border as groups of violent men attack farmers.
Days after the chaos witnessed in the national capital on Republic Day, violence again erupted as a group of men claiming to be ‘locals’ stormed the farmers’ protest site at Singhu border near Delhi, demanding that the area be vacated. They went on to pelt stones and vandalised the tents of the protesting farmers. It is worth noting that the farmers had been protesting peacefully at this site for nearly two months. Multiple videos shared by reporters and independent journalists on social media showed security personnel standing mute witnesses as the group of ‘locals’ marched freely through the heavily barricaded and guarded approach to the Singhu protest site and launched attacks on the farmers camped there. They could also be seen chanting ‘Goli Maaro’ [shoot them] slogans, which were last used in early 2020 by groups opposed to the protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act. Unrest at Singhu border is not a case of locals clashing with agitating farmers, but a concerted effort by goons to attack the farmers protest, said activist Yogendra Yadav, one of the spokespersons of the protesting farmers. Meanwhile, following an emotional speech by Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) leader Rakesh Tikait, triggered by a police attempt to forcibly evict farmers from the Ghazipur protest site on the night of January 28, thousands of more farmers were reportedly on their way to Ghazipur and Singhu protest sites in a show of solidarity with their fellow farmers. In a related development, Congress President Rahul Gandhi, in a press conference today warned the Narendra Modi government that if it doesn’t take steps to resolve the farmers’ unrest quickly, it could soon spread to other parts of the country. The only to way to resolve the issue, he said, was to repeal the three laws, and unless this demand is met, the farmers are not going to go home.
C) India could be reduced to ‘a country of incarcerated artists and flourishing lapdogs,’ Kunal Kamra tells SC.
Stand-up comedian Kunal Kamra, facing contempt for scandalising the Supreme Court with his tweets, said the phenomenon of taking offence to comedy or satire has been elevated to the status of a much-loved indoor sport in a growing culture of intolerance. The suggestion that his tweets could shake the foundations of the most powerful court in the world is an over-estimation of his abilities. Just as the Supreme Court values the faith public places in it, it should also trust the public not to form its opinions of the court on the basis of a few jokes on Twitter. His tweets were not published with the intention of diminishing the faith of the people in the highest court, Kamra said in a six-page reply to the suo motu contempt notice against him. Taking offence was now seen as a fundamental right, Kamra said. Comedians like Munawar Faruqui are jailed for jokes they did not make. School students are interrogated for sedition, Kamra told the Supreme Court. Hope the court will demonstrate that free speech is a cardinal constitutional value. If the powerful are unable to tolerate rebuke and criticism, they will be reduced to a country of incarcerated artists and flourishing lapdogs, Kamra said. Jokes need no defence, he wrote, pointing out that they were based on a comedian’s perception. His job was to share his perception with his audience and make them laugh. Most people do not react to jokes that do not make them laugh. They ignore them like our political leaders ignore their critics. That is where the life of a joke must end, he told the Supreme Court.
D) Govt will abide by SC order to stay rollout of farm laws, says President; condemns Republic Day violence.
The Union Government respects the Supreme Court and will abide by its decision to stay the implementation of the three farm laws, President Ram Nath Kovind told a joint sitting of Parliament on Friday, even as he strongly defended the new laws and asserted that 10 crore small farmers have benefited from them. Referring to the violence during the tractor parade and the chaos after groups of farmers stormed the Red Fort on January 26, the President said it was unfortunate that the national flag was disrespected on the occasion of Republic Day. The government has always respected freedom of expression and the holding of peaceful agitations in a democratic set-up. However, the recent acts of dishonouring the national flag and showing disrespect to the auspicious occasion of the Republic Day are unfortunate, Kovind said. While the Constitution gives us the right to freedom of expression, it is also expected that we abide by the laws and rules with equal sincerity, the President said. While the President’s address prepared by the Cabinet to showcase the achievements of the union government dwelt on agricultural reforms at length, it was boycotted by more than 20 Opposition parties, including the Congress.
E) Budget to be seen as building on ‘mini-budgets’: PM Modi.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi termed the current Budget Session the first of this decade and an opportunity to fulfill the dreams of freedom fighters. The last year was also a year which saw not one but several mini-budget-like packages announced as we dealt with the Covid-19 pandemic, and this budget is to be seen as part of that series of mini-budgets presented by the government last year, said Modi, offering key hints on the Union budget to be presented on February 1. Modi added that the government would take every step to fulfill the expectations of the people and hoped that all members of Parliament would direct their energy to this goal. The Budget Session of Parliament will be held between January 29 and April 8, with a recess from February 15 to March 7. The continued protest by farmer unions on the three agriculture-related laws cleared by Parliament in the last Monsoon Session is expected to make this a stormy session.
F) Dr Reddy’s eyes March launch of Sputnik V vaccine under Emergency Use Authorisation.
Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, which is conducting phase-3 trials of Russia’s Covid-19 vaccine Sputnik V, believes the jab can be expected to be launched in India through Emergency Use Authorisation (EUA), a senior official of the city-based drug maker said on Friday. The phase-3 trial is currently ongoing. We are dosing patients and we expect to complete the dosing as part of the phase-3 trials by February. After that they expect to compile the data and submit for Emergency Use Authorisation, and make the request to the DCGI with our dossier, company’s CEO of APIs and Pharmaceutical Services Deepak Sapra said. In September last, Dr. Reddy’s partnered with Russia Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) to conduct the clinical trials of the Sputnik V vaccine and for its distribution rights in India. Based on the approval from the DCGI, we believe that we should be in a position to launch the vaccine through a EUA in the month of March 2021 (in India), Sapra said at a press conference in Hyderabad. Sputnik V, developed by the Gamaleya National Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology, was registered by the Ministry of Health of Russia and became the world’s first registered vaccine against Covid-19 based on the established human adenoviral vector platform.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
A) U.S. is bombarding civilians in breach of Afghan deal: Taliban.
The Taliban on Friday rejected Washington’s accusations that it had not lived up to its promises in Afghanistan, in turn claiming the U.S. was ‘bombarding civilians’. The U.S. signed a landmark deal with the insurgents last year, agreeing to withdraw its troops from the country in return for security guarantees after a stalemate on the battlefield. The other side have violated the agreement, almost every day they are violating it, Mohammad Naeem, a Taliban spokesman said. They are bombarding civilians, houses and villages, and we have informed them from time to time, these are not just violations of the agreement but violations of human rights. The U.S military has in recent months carried out air strikes against the Taliban fighters in defence of Afghan forces in some provinces. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid added on Twitter that the allegations against the group were unfounded and that it was fully committed to the agreement. John Kirby told reporters on Thursday that the Biden administration remains committed to the Taliban-U.S. deal and ending the war in a responsible way. However, he said, the Taliban are not meeting their commitments to reduce violence, and to renounce their ties to al-Qaeda. They are still involved in trying to get a negotiated settlement, he added. The agreement, signed in Doha last year, required the Taliban to halt attacks on U.S. forces, sharply decrease the level of violence in the country, and advance peace talks with the government in Kabul.
B) Biden taps nuclear deal veteran to resume negotiations with Iran.
The new U.S. administration under Joe Biden has named Rob Malley, an architect of the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, as its special envoy to resume talks with Tehran, defying pressure from hawks who accuse him of being too conciliatory toward the Islamic republic. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is building a dedicated team, drawing from clear-eyed experts with a diversity of views, State Department spokesman Ned Price said. Mr. Malley, a childhood friend of Mr. Blinken, has been serving as head of the International Crisis Group, an independent non-governmental organisation focused on conflict resolution. Before that, he was one of the chief negotiators on the 2015 nuclear deal reached by Iran and world powers, under which Tehran was promised economic relief for curbs in its contested nuclear programme. The deal was reached under Barack Obama.
C) Pfizer vaccine not linked to deaths: EU regulator.
The Pfizer/BioNTech coronavirus jab has no link to reported post-vaccination deaths and no new side effects, the EU’s medicines regulator said on Friday based on the first data from the vaccine’s rollout. The update by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) followed reports that dozens of mainly elderly people had died in Norway and other European countries after receiving a first shot of the vaccine. The EMA said it had concluded that the data did not show a link to vaccination with Comirnaty (the name of the vaccine) and the cases do not raise a safety concern. The benefits of Comirnaty in preventing COVID-19 continue to outweigh any risks, and there are no recommended changes regarding the use of the vaccine, the EMA said. The EMA authorised AstraZeneca’s vaccine for use in adults throughout the EU on Friday, amid criticism the bloc is not moving fast enough to vaccinate its population. The regulator licensed the vaccine to be used in people 18 and over.
A) Delhi Police issue notice to 20 more farmer leaders.
The Delhi Police on Thursday issued notices to 20 more farmer leaders for defying terms and conditions agreed upon for the tractor rally. DCP (Headquarters) Chimoy Biswal confirmed that notices had been sent to farmer leaders who met with the police for the rally. In the letter, the leaders have been asked to explain why legal action should not be taken against them and other members of their organisations. They have been told to file a reply within three days. The letter further said that despite agreeing to the mutually decided terms and conditions for the rally, the farmer leaders acted in an irresponsible manner on January 26. Militant elements occupied the stage and delivered provocative speeches right from the early hours of the day. Meanwhile, the Ghaziabad administration has given an ultimatum to protesting farmers to vacate U.P. Gate by January 28 midnight or face forcible removal, officials said. Ghaziabad District Magistrate Ajay Shankar Pandey has communicated to the protesters camping at the U.P. Gate at Delhi border to vacate the spot by tonight or the administration will remove them, a district official said.
B) AIKS raises questions on police narrative, hints at conspiracy.
Reacting to allegations that farmer organisations are responsible the violent turn of events on Republic Day, one of the protesting unions, All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) put out a series of tweets raising questions about the government’s version of what transpired on the day of the tractor rally. The turn of events on Republic Day points clearly to the complicity of the BJP Gov. & @DelhiPolice in aiding & abetting the disruptors. The following questions have to be answered: The Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee which isn’t part of Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM) was allowed permission behind the stage of SKM & wasn’t surrounded by barricades while the SKM mobilisation was heavily barricaded. What is their relationship with the police and the BJP Gov?? asked AIKS. In subsequent tweets, it went on to ask, Why did police go against the route plan agreed with the SKM leadership and allow an alternative route to the KMSC which was allowed to reach up to the Red Fort? Why did police resort to brutal unprovoked lathi-charge on the [tracgtor] Parade from Palwal at Sikari after it peacefully crossed 15 km while the mutually agreed route was to cover 45 km? Why the police that resorted to brutal lathi-charge on peaceful protestors from Palwal made no effort to stop the group from reaching Red Fort? And finally, There have also been many instances of farmers handing over agent provocateurs to the police including on 26 Jan 2021 & the anti-social elements who claimed to have come with the intention to shoot farmers’ leaders. What is the police action on them?
C) 16 Opposition parties to boycott President’s joint address to Parliament.
Leaders of 16 Opposition parties, in a joint statement on Thursday, announced their decision to boycott President Ram Nath Kovind’s address to a joint sitting of Parliament on Friday over the Union government’s undemocratic attitude towards the farmers. The Budget session will get underway on Friday and President Kovind will address the first sitting this year of both Houses. But Opposition leaders have set the tone for a stormy session by announcing their decision to skip the Presidential address over the Centre’s refusal to repeal the three farm laws and its handling of the farmer agitation. These leaders also asserted that an impartial investigation will reveal the Central Government’s nefarious role in orchestrating those events. The Prime Minister and the BJP Government remain arrogant, adamant and undemocratic in their response. Shocked by this insensitivity of the Government, we, the following opposition political parties, reaffirming the collective demand for the repeal of the Anti Farmer Laws and in solidarity with the Indian Farmers, have decided to boycott the President’s address to both the Houses of Parliament on Friday, January 29, 2021, read the joint statement, signed by senior Opposition leaders. The signatories include representatives from the Congress, NCP, Trinamool Congress, Shiv Sena, National Conference, DMK, Samajwadi Party, RJD, CPI, and CPI-M. The BSP, Telangana Rashtra Samithi, YSR Congress, Biju Janata Dal and AAP have not signed the joint the statement even though some of them had protested against the farm laws during their passage in Parliament last September. Parliamentary Affairs Minister Prahlad Joshi appealed to opposition leaders to desist from their proposed boycott of the President Ram Nath Kovind’s joint address.
D) Stopping hate on TV as essential as police lathis, barricades to prevent riots: Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court on Thursday said stopping hate on television was as essential for law and order as arming policemen with lathis and putting up barricades to prevent the spread of violence and riots. Control over certain kind of news which agitate people to violence and riots is a law and order problem. Preventing it is as powerful as putting up barricades. Preventing instigation is as important as providing lathis to policemen, Chief Justice of India Sharad A. Bobde, heading a three-judge Bench, addressed Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the Centre. The CJI said the court, by government control, did not mean to curb free speech on TV. People can take any tone on TV as long as they don’t incite violence, hatred, communal riots. We are interested only with people instigating and inciting violence and riots. These are situations which cause loss of lives and property. That is what we are worried about, Chief Justice Bobde explained.
E) One more Bombay High Court POCSO fiasco.
The Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court has ruled that a man holding the hands of a minor girl and opening the zip of his trouser does not fall under the purview of ‘sexual assault’ or ‘aggravated sexual assault’ of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act. The observation was made by a single judge Bench of Justice Pushpa Ganediwala on January 15 while passing an order on an appeal filed by a 50-year-old man challenging a Sessions court’s order convicting him of sexually assaulting and molesting a five-year-old girl. The convict, Libnus Kujur, was in October 2020 convicted under sections 354-A (1)(i) (outraging modesty) and 448 (house trespass) of the IPC, and sections 8 (sexual assault), 10 (aggravated sexual assault) and 12 (sexual harassment) of the POCSO Act. He was sentenced to five years in jail. In her judgment, Justice Ganediwala noted that while the prosecution has established that the accused entered the house of the victim with an intention to outrage her modesty or sexually harass her, it has not been able to prove the charge of ‘sexual assault’ or ‘aggravated sexual assault’. This ruling is reminiscent of another verdict, delivered on January 19, also by a single judge, Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court. It had acquitted a man charged under the POCSO Act, ruling that mere touching or pressing of a clothed body of a child, without skin to skin contact, did not amount to sexual assault. Subsequently, the Supreme Court stayed this verdict.
F) Covid Watch: Numbers and Developments.
The number of reported coronavirus cases from India stood at 1,07,13,640 with the death toll at 1,54, 031. The government on Thursday said a fifth of the districts in the country had reported no new cases for a week. Meanwhile, the Covid-19 immunisation campaign has covered 2.4 million people. India has successfully contained the pandemic, Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said, noting that fewer than 12,000 cases were reported in the past 24 hours. He said 146 of India’s 718 districts have had no new cases for a week and 18 districts for two weeks. India has flattened its Covid-19 graph, Dr. Vardhan added. With infections falling, the government said that from February 1, it would lift curbs on the use of public swimming pools, allow cinema halls and theatres to seat more than 50% of capacity, and let all types of exhibition halls to operate.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
A) New Zealand, Vietnam top Covid-19 performance index; India 86 from 98 countries.
New Zealand and Vietnam were ranked the best-performing countries in their response to the pandemic, according to a Covid-19 performance index put together by the Lowy Institute, an Australian think-tank, which sought to assess the impact of geography, political systems, and economic development in assessing outcomes. The index, which was based on six different indicators, including confirmed cases, deaths per million people, and the scale of testing, sought to gauge the relative performance of countries, and assessed 98 countries in the 36 weeks that followed their hundredth case. India ranked 86th out of 98 countries, while the United States placed 94, and Brazil at the bottom of the index. New Zealand and Vietnam led the list, followed by Taiwan, Thailand and Cyprus in the top five. Sri Lanka was the best performing nation in South Asia, ranking 10, while the Maldives was at 25, Pakistan at 69, Nepal at 70, and Bangladesh at 84.
B) Biden reverses Trump decision on H-1B for spouses.
A week after his inauguration, US President Joe Biden has withdrawn a Trump-era rule rescinding work authorisation for H4 visa holders, who are spouses of those possessing H-1B work visas, with majority of them being highly-skilled Indian women. An H-4 visa is issued by the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to immediate family members (spouse and children under 21 years of age) of the H-1B visa holders, most of whom are Indian IT professionals. The H-1B visa is a non-immigrant visa that allows US companies to employ foreign workers in specialty occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise. The technology companies depend on it to hire tens of thousands of employees each year from countries like India and China. The H4 visa is normally issued to those who have already started the process of seeking employment-based lawful permanent resident status in the US. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) on Monday said the rule titled, ‘Removing H-4 Dependent Spouses from the Class of Aliens Eligible for Employment Authorisation’, was being withdrawn. Spouses of Indian professionals on H-1B visas, mostly women, are the biggest beneficiaries of the Obama-era rule that gave employment authorisation cards.
A) Farmer unions blame violence on ‘conspiracy’; cancel Budget Day march to Parliament.
Farmers’ unions have blamed Tuesday’s violence on a conspiracy hatched with the Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee (KMSC) and anti-social elements such as Deep Sidhu. They claimed that the incidents on Republic Day had exposed the anti-farmer forces and vowed to continue a peaceful protest. After an emergency meeting under the chairmanship of veteran Punjab leader Balbir Singh Rajewal, the Samyukt Kisan Morcha said they had discussed the violent incidents in New Delhi and concluded that the Union Govt. has been severely shaken by this peasant agitation. Therefore, a dirty conspiracy was hatched with Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee and others against the peaceful struggle of other farmer organisations. After the Republic Day parade plans were made, anti-social elements like Deep Sidhu and others, including the KMSC, attempted to torpedo the farmers’ agitation, the SKM said. The farm unions condemned the violence, the government, the KSMC, and the anti-social elements who tried to damage the struggle. The organisations resolved not to allow the government and other forces inimical to the peaceful movement to break this struggle. Yesterday’s events exposed and isolated the anti-farmer forces clearly, said the SKM statement. The SKM claimed that the KMSC was not part of the organisations which jointly undertook the struggle, noting that the Punjab union had set up its own separate protest site with a separate stage at the Singhu border within 15 days of the start of the agitation. Although the KMSC is part of the negotiations with the Centre along with the other unions, SKM leaders emphasised that this was only because the government had invited the rogue Punjab union. Meanwhile, union leaders announced that they have cancelled the scheduled march to Parliament on Budget Day, February 1. Instead, they now plan to hold ‘jan sabhas’ across the country on January 30, Mahatma Gandhi’s death anniversary.
B) Delhi Police detain 200, name key farmer leaders in FIRs.
The Delhi Police have detained 200 people in connection with the violence during the farmers’ tractor rally on Republic Day, officials said on Wednesday. Police said they are likely to detain and question more people in connection with Tuesday’s violence in the national capital. Tens of thousands of farmers broke barriers on Tuesday to storm the national capital and highlight their demands. The Delhi Police has also registered 22 FIRs so far in connection with the violence that left over 300 policemen injured. More than 35 farmer leaders have been named in the FIRs, including Rakesh Tikait, Darshan Pal Singh, Rajinder Singh, Balbir Singh Rajewal, Buta Singh Burjgil, Joginder Singh Ugrahan, and Yogendra Yadav. Interestingly, Deep Sidhu, the man widely believed to be behind the incitement that led to the violence at Red Fort on Tuesday, has not been named in any FIR. Sidhu was an election agent for Sunny Deol, a BJP MP. He has been photographed with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah, and has been a campaigner for the BJP.
C) Three TV journalists booked in U.P. for showing students ‘shivering in cold’ during govt function. Police in Uttar Pradesh’s Kanpur Dehat district have booked three television journalists on charges of airing a baseless news report of children of a government school shivering in cold in knickers and cotton shirts during a drill at a public function on January 24. The event was part of a government function held at the Eco Park in Kanpur Dehat on the occasion of U.P. Foundation Day. Minister for Technology Ajit Singh Pal, MLAs and officials were present. The FIR was lodged at the Akbarpur police station on a complaint of Sunil Dutt, district basic education officer. Dutt accused the three journalists of publishing baseless and misleading reports and videos that suggested that pupils were made to shiver in cold while performing drills and yoga. Children perform at a Uttar Pradesh Foundation Day function attended by State Minister Ajit Singh Pal at Kanpur Dehat district on January 24, 2021. Three journalists have been booked by the district police for airing news report showing children of a government school shivering in cold during the event. The three, working for a local TV channel, have been identified as Mohit Kashyap, Amit Singh and Yaseen Ali. The three were not even present at the event, officials said. Visuals of the event shows pupils performing drills apparently in summer uniform and holding toy guns. The FIR accused the journalists of suggesting that the officials were busy while the children shivered in cold. In the complainant, Dutt said the pupils were made to take off their winter-wear only while performing yoga and exercise, and that subsequently they wore their warm clothes. Yoga and physical exercise could not be carried out in winter clothes and required loose clothing, he pointed out.
D) Supreme Court stays Bombay High Court POCSO order.
The Supreme Court has stayed a controversial Bombay High Court verdict, which acquitted a man found guilty of assault under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO) on the grounds that he groped his victim over her clothes and there was no ‘skin-to-skin’ contact between them. A Bench led by Chief Justice of India Sharad A. Bobde on Wednesday took cognisance instantaneously after Attorney General K.K. Venugopal made a special mention in court, saying the High Court decision would set a very dangerous precedent and cripple the intention of POCSO to punish sexual offenders. On January 19, a single judge of the Bombay High Court’s Nagpur Bench created a furore after he acquitted a man under POCSO Act and held that an act against a minor would amount to groping or sexual assault only if there was skin-to-skin contact. The High Court had concluded that mere touching or pressing of a clothed body of a child did not amount to sexual assault. Venugopal said that in the future, because of the order, an accused could claim innocence under POCSO by arguing that the child he assaulted was clothed and there was no direct physical skin-to-skin contact between them. The Bench issued notice to the accused and to the State of Maharashtra after registering a case on the basis of Venugopal’s mentioning.
E) No protection from arrest for makers of ‘Tandav’
The Supreme Court today declined to pass an order to protect the makers and artists of Amazon Prime’s ‘Tandav’ web series from arrest even as it agreed to examine their plea to club the FIRs registered against them in various States on the charge of hurting Hindu religious sentiments. A three-judge Bench led by Justice Ashok Bhushan asked them to approach the concerned lower courts for interim relief, including bail. The court also rejected their plea to quash the FIRs. The court did not appear convinced when the makers and artists explained that the web series was a political satire and urged the court to protect their freedom of artistic speech and expression. Justice M.R. Shah, on the Bench, said free speech is not absolute and is subject to reasonable restrictions. One of the actors, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, described to the court that he had enacted a character whose dialogues in the series had no connection whatsoever to his own individual beliefs. You cannot play the role of a character which hurts the religious sentiments of others, Justice Shah responded.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
A) Iran says Israel is waging a psychological war.
A top Iranian official on Wednesday said Israel was waging a psychological war after the Jewish state’s Army said new offensive options were being drawn up in case they were needed against the Islamic republic. Mahmoud Vaezi, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s chief of staff, also vowed that his country was ready and willing to defend itself. They have no intention of going to war, but they are serious about defending the country, he said. Israel, a close U.S. ally, accuses Iran of seeking to build a nuclear bomb, a charge Tehran denies. Israel’s military chief General Aviv Kochavi said on Tuesday he had ordered new plans be drawn up this year to counter Iran’s nuclear capabilities, in case political leaders decided to target the country. The power to initiate them lies with the political echelon, Gen. Kochavi stressed. However, the offensive options need to be prepared, ready and on the table. Mr. Vaezi shot back on Wednesday, accusing Israel of conducting a psychological war. Iran’s recent military manoeuvres, testing missiles and drones, Mr. Vaezi added, showed that our armed forces are trained to defend Iran. Gen. Kochavi’s remarks came nearly a week after the inauguration of U.S. President Joe Biden, who has signalled he wants to return to dialogue with Iran.
B) Pak. plans to hold Senate polls through open vote. Pakistan Cabinet has decided to table a Bill in Parliament to amend the Constitution for holding the Senate elections through open vote. The decision was taken during the Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, presided over by Prime Minister Imran Khan. The government wants the (Senate) polls to be held in a transparent manner and without horse-trading. This is why we want Senate polls to be held through an open ballot, Information Minister Shibli Faraz told the media after the meeting. He said that in the past, money was used in Senate elections and votes were bought making the House election a mockery. The Minister asked what was the use of an upper house in which people come through purchasing of votes. Mr. Faraz also said that people opposing the proposed move are forgetting that their own party had demanded open ballot in the past. The government will present a constitutional amendment Bill in the Parliament so that Senate polls are held through open ballot, he said.
A) Farmers’ protests take a violent turn on Republic Day.
Tens of thousands of farmers atop tractors broke barriers, clashed with police, and entered the city from various points to reach the Red Fort on Republic Day. One young man was seen hoisting a yellow triangular flag at the Red Fort’s flagpole – the centrepiece of the country’s Independence Day celebrations. The flag was the ‘Nishan Sahib’, a symbol of Sikh religion seen at all Gurdwara complexes. One farmer, Navdeep Singh Hundal, 26, died amid the clashes in central Delhi. While the police claimed that he died when his tractor overturned, some farmers alleged that he was killed in police firing and have begun a sit-in protest. Farmer union leaders, who have been spearheading the two-month protest at the national capital’s border points to demand a repeal of the farm laws, disowned the protesters who deviated from the route approved by the police. Earlier in the day, a clash broke out between police and protesting farmers after the latter reached ITO and tried to push towards Lutyen’s Delhi, and the police responded with a lathi charge and use of tear gas shells against them. The farmers, who began their march from different border points much before the time allotted to them for their tractor rally, reached ITO in Central Delhi despite the police denying them permission for it. The Delhi Police had given permission for a tractor parade on selected routes only, and with the proviso that the rally takes place after the official Republic Day parade on Rajpath concluded. However, chaos ensued as the farmers decided to head towards central Delhi in the morning itself. Notwithstanding the violence and chaos in the capital on Republic Day, the Centre is inclined to continue talks with the agitating farmer leaders, a top government source told.
B) India’s heritage, military might on display at Rajpath.
India celebrated its 72nd Republic Day on Tuesday across the country, albeit in a muted manner, due to the pandemic. Delhi Police advised people to watch the live telecast of Republic Day parade at home due to Covid-19 protocols. Invitees attending the parade at Rajpath had to comply with the Covid-19 advisory that included temperature check, use of sanitiser, mask, and social distancing. The Camel Contingent of Border Security Force take part at Republic Parade. The Camel Contingent of Border Security Force take part at Republic Parade. This time, there was no chief guest at the Republic Day parade. Additionally, the route of the marching contingent ended at the India Gate C-Hexagon instead of at the Red Fort. The parade culminated in a single Rafale aircraft flying at a speed of 900km/hr. This year also marked the first time that the newly inducted Rafale fighter aircraft featured in India’s Republic Day fly past as it carried out the ‘Brahmastra’ formation by itself, and participated in the ‘Eklavya’ formation with four other fighter jets.
C) Padma awards for 2021 announced; late Col. Santosh Babu bestowed Maha Vir Chakra.
Late singer and music composer S.P. Balasubramaniam, former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, and Islamic scholar Maulana Wahiduddin Khan have been conferred India’s second highest civilian award, the Padma Vibhushan. In the annual national honours list, singer K.S Chithra, former Lok Sabha speaker Sumitra Mahajan, and Nripendra Misra, former principal secretary to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, are among the 10 recipients of the Padma Bhushan. The Padma Bhushan will be conferred posthumously to former Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi, Union minister Ram Vilas Paswan, former Gujarat chief minister Keshubhai Patel, and Shia cleric Kalbe Sadiq. Colonel B Santhosh Babu, Commanding Officer of 16 Bihar Regiment, who was in Galwan as part of Operation Snow Leopard, and lost his life along with 19 others in the violent clash with China’s People Liberation Army (PLA) in June last year, has been posthumously awarded the Maha Vir Chakra (MVC), the country’s second highest war time gallantry award. Five other personnel deployed in Galwan have been awarded the Vir Chakra four of them posthumously. The Vir Chakra is the third highest war time gallantry award. Babu’s father said he was not 100% satisfied with the Maha Vir Chakra posthumously awarded to his son. More than 900 police and central armed police force (CAPF) personnel received medals, including 207 gallantry medals, on the eve of Republic Day. Assistant Sub Inspector Mohan Lal of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), who was killed in the suicide attack in Pulwama on February 14, 2019, was awarded the President’s Police Medal for Gallantry (PPMG) posthumously. None of the 21 Indo Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) personnel who faced Chinese aggression and thwarted incursions in various sectors in Eastern Ladakh last year in April-May received any medal this year. ITBP had recommended gallantry medals for the 21 personnel in August last year.
D) Supreme Court dismisses plea seeking transfer of petitions against U.P. anti-conversion law.
The Supreme Court on Monday dismissed the Uttar Pradesh government’s plea to transfer to the court all petitions filed in the Allahabad High Court challenging the new law that criminalises inter-faith marriages, Live Law reported. A bench headed by Chief Justice of India S.A. Bobde took exception to the request, and asserted that no constitutional court should be taken lightly. If the Allahabad High Court is going to decide the cases, why should we interfere? the top court asked. People are making light of High Courts these days. The High Court is a constitutional court.
E) Ayodhya mosque construction starts.
The formal construction of the Dhannipur Mosque Project was launched on Republic Day with the unfurling of the tricolour, singing of the National Anthem, and the planting of saplings of various trees, including tamarind, mango, neem and guava at the five-acre plot in Dhannipur village here. The plot was allotted by the Uttar Pradesh government on the directions of the Supreme Court in the Babri Masjid-Ram Janmabhoomi title suit. The soil testing procedure for the structure has also been initiated. The members of the Indo-Islamic Cultural Foundation (IICF), which is overseeing the construction, assembled at the place at 8:30 am. After a brief Republic Day ceremony, conducted in the presence of police personnel, IICF chief trustee Zufar Faruqi planted the first sapling, a tamarind tree, to mark the symbolic and low-key start of the project in the one-third area of the plot that will be developed as a green patch. IICF chief trustee Zufar Faruqi planted a sapling, followed by other members to mark the symbolic and low-key start of the Dhannipur Mosque Project. IICF chief trustee Zufar Faruqi planted a sapling, followed by other members to mark the symbolic and low-key start of the Dhannipur Mosque Project. The project would comprise three parts: a mosque based on a modern design and a solar panel roof; a multi-specialty 200-bed hospital and community kitchen; and an Indo Islamic Cultural Research Centre, consisting of a library, underground museum and publication house. The project is estimated to cost around ₹100-110 crore, which would be collected through charity but without any door to door fund-raising, Hussain said. Incidentally, the organisers did not invite any of the former litigants or persons associated with the Babri Masjid case to the event.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
A) Biden reimposes ban on travellers from Europe, adds South Africa to restricted list.
Reversing his predecessor Donald Trump’s policy, U.S. President Joe Biden on Monday reimposed a ban on travellers from Europe and Brazil. The White House also barred travelers from South Africa from entering the U.S. due to the emergence of a new variant of coronavirus in that country. The President is taking these steps on the advice of his COVID-19 and medical team, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters at her daily press briefing. President Biden has decided to maintain the restrictions previously in place for the European Schengen area, the United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland and Brazil, Psaki said. The U.S. government has said that it will require airline passengers entering the country to show proof of a negative COVID-19 test before boarding their flights. With the pandemic worsening and more contagious variants spreading, this isn’t the time to lift restrictions on international travel, Psaki said. And in light of the contagious variant B1351, South Africa has been added to the restricted list, she said. Additionally, beginning January 26, international travellers to the United States must provide proof of a negative test within three days of travel to airlines prior to departure, she added. This applies regardless of citizenship, she asserted.
B) Dutch police detain over 180 in third night of curfew.
Dutch police detained more than 180 people in a third night of unrest in cities across the Netherlands, where roaming groups of rioters set fires, threw rocks and looted stores in violence triggered by a night curfew aimed at curbing the coronavirus. The first curfew since the Second World War followed a warning by the National Institute for Health (RIVM) over a new wave of infections due to the British variant of the virus, and was imposed on Saturday despite weeks of declines in new infections. They have had riots in the past, but it’s rare to have this for several nights across the entire country, said National Police spokeswoman Suzanne van de Graaf. It’s not only in known problem areas, but much more widespread. Riot police with shields and batons were called out in more than 10 cities, many of which had issued emergency ordnance to provide officers with greater powers to conduct searches. Police scuffled with rioters in several cities late into the night, chasing them down narrow streets with vans or on foot as helicopters hovered overhead. In the capital Amsterdam, groups of youths threw fireworks, broke store windows and attacked a police truck, but were broken up by massive police presence. Ten police were injured in Rotterdam, where 60 rioters were detained overnight after widespread looting and destruction in the city centre, a police spokeswoman said. Supermarkets in the port city were emptied, while rubbish bins and vehicles were set ablaze. Two photographers were hurt after being targeted by rockthrowing gangs, police said. The Dutch government said it will not back down on its curfew. They don’t capitulate to people who smash shop windows. That is not the case, Finance Minister Wopke Hoekstra was quoted as saying by Dutch news agency ANP.
A) Delhi Police permits tractor rally, with 37 conditions; farmers announce Budget Day march to Parliament.
The Delhi Police on Monday issued a No Objection Certificate (NOC) to the farmers’ proposed tractor rally in New Delhi during Republic Day on Tuesday, after union leaders agreed to 37 conditions during a meeting with the police. According to the conditions agreed to, the organisers shall limit the number of participants in the rally to 5,000 persons, along with 5,000 tractors. The rally shall be held within the prescribed time period i.e. from 1200 hours to 1700 hours only on January 26, 2021. The participants in the rally should not indulge in any acrobatics, display of martial arts, or stunt driving. No weapons such as firearms, swords, spear, mashaals and lathis, including religious symbols other than the permitted ones, shall be carried. Meanwhile, farmer unions on Monday announced that they will march towards Parliament from different locations on February 1 when the annual Union Budget is scheduled to be presented, PTI reported. Darshan Pal of the Krantikari Kisan Union said the protesting farmers remain firm in their stand of repealing the three new farm laws and their agitation will continue till their demands are met. They will march towards Parliament on foot from different locations on the Budget day on February 1. As far as the tractor rally is concerned, it will give the government an idea of our strength and they will know the agitation is not just limited to Haryana or Punjab but it is an agitation of the whole country, he said. The farmers who have come for the tractor parade will not go back now and will join the protest. The agitation will continue till our demands met. Our stand remains the same, Pal told a press conference. Thousands of armed personnel have been deployed at the Rajpath and several border points of the national capital, which has been brought under a multi-layered security cover in view of Republic Day celebrations as well as the proposed tractor rally.
B) Indian billionaires increased their wealth by 35% during lockdown.
Indian billionaires increased their wealth during the lockdown by 35% to ₹3 trillion. The sharp increment in their wealth since the lockdown in March is enough to give every one of the 138 million poorest Indians a cheque for ₹94,045 each, according to Oxfam’s Inequality Virus Report, released on the opening day of the World Economic Forum in Davos. The spike in the wealth of just the top 11 billionaires during the pandemic could easily sustain the MGNREGS or the Health Ministry for the next 10 years, stated the report, which also underscored how Covid-19 has deepened inequalities. While the wealthiest escaped the worst impact of the pandemic, the poor faced joblessness, starvation and death, the report noted. Mukesh Ambani, who has emerged as the richest man in India and Asia, was earning ₹90 crore an hour during the pandemic. At the same time, during the lockdown, 24% of the people in the country were earning under ₹3,000 a month. The increase in Ambani’s wealth alone could keep 40 crore informal workers out of poverty for at least five months, said the report. Meanwhile, 170,000 people lost their jobs every hour in the month of April 2020, the report said. The Oxfam report recommended reintroducing the wealth tax and effecting a one-time Covid-19 cess of 4% on taxable income of over ₹10 lakh to help the economy recover from the lockdown. According to its estimate, wealth tax on the nation’s 954 richest families could raise the equivalent of 1% of the GDP. The report also delved deeper into different forms of inequities, including educational, gender and health. These inequalities meant that the amenities to be able to wash hands and maintain distance, essential to prevent the spread of Coronavirus, were not available for a majority of the population. According to the report, only 6% of the poorest 20% have access to non-shared sources of improved sanitation, compared to 93.4 % of the top 20 %. About 59.6% of India’s population lived in a room or less, which meant that protocols necessary to prevent the spread of Covid-19 could not be followed. Calling the coronavirus pandemic the world’s worst public health crisis in a hundred years, the report said it triggered an economic crisis comparable in scale only with the Great Depression of the 1930s.
C) WhatsApp’s differential treatment of Indian citizens a cause for concern, says Centre.
The Centre on Monday told the Delhi High Court that WhatsApp’s differential treatment of Indian users – in comparison to their European users when it came to its privacy policy was a cause for concern to the government. Additional Solicitor General (ASG) Chetan Sharma, appearing for the Central government, said that the privacy policy offered by WhatsApp to its European users, specifically prohibition of any information shared with Facebook, while this provision is not present in the privacy policy offered to Indian citizens who form a very substantial part of WhatsApp user base. This differential treatment is a cause for concern to the government, the ASG said. The government is also concerned with the way Indian users have been subjected to these changes rather unilaterally. By not providing the Indian users the ability to opt out of this data being shared with other Facebook companies, WhatsApp prima facie seems to be treating Indian users with an all-or-nothing approach, ASG Sharma said. This, Sharma said, may infringe on Indian users’ interests in relation to information privacy and information security. Though the issue is between two private parties, Sharma said, the scope and expanse of WhatsApp makes it a germane ground that reasonable and cogent policies are put in place which is being done by the Personal Data Protection Bill. The Personal Data Protection Bill is being discussed by the Joint Committee of the Parliament, Sharma added. Taking note of the fact that the matter is being looked into at the highest level, Justice Sanjeev Sachdeva adjourned the hearing in the case for March 1, by which the Centre will place on record the steps being taken on the issue. The court, however, declined to grant the plea of petitioner Manohar Lal to issue notice to WhatsApp. Lal, in his petition, has claimed that WhatsApp’s new privacy policy violates the right to privacy guaranteed under the Constitution. It said the new policy virtually gives a 360-degree profile into a person’s online activity without there being any supervision by the government.
D) Indian and Chinese troops clashed at Naku La in Sikkim.
Indian and Chinese troops clashed at Naku La in North Sikkim last week. The clashes resulted in some minor injuries on both sides, it has been learnt. It is clarified that there was a minor face-off at Naku La area of North Sikkim on January 20, 2021 and the same was resolved by local commanders as per established protocols, the Army said in a statement. The clash occurred as People’s Liberation Army (PLA) troops attempted to intrude into Indian territory, a defence source said. There were some minor injuries on both sides but the situation was resolved and under control, the source said. The clash occurred amid high alert and heavy deployment of troops along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) on both sides since the standoff began. Given that this is peak winter and temperatures are extremely low, the situation has been largely quiet as both sides dug in while diplomatic and military-level talks continue attempts to work out an agreement for disengagement and de-escalation.
E) Beant Singh killing: SC gives govt. two weeks to decide on mercy plea.
The government told the Supreme Court on Monday that a decision on the mercy plea of Balwant Singh Rajoana, in jail for 26 years for the assassination of former Punjab Chief Minister Beant Singh, would have some repercussions now. Appearing before a Bench led by Chief Justice of India Sharad A. Bobde, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, for the Centre, sought three weeks’ time. Why three weeks? What are you doing? You said you will take a decision before Republic Day, Chief Justice Bobde asked Mehta. What are they doing? It has been 26 years of jail for him (Balwant Singh). Your Lordships have given them (government) a long rope, senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi, for Balwant Singh, said, objecting to Mehta’s submissions. He is in jail for 26 years, yes, but he is in jail for the assassination of a former Chief Minister of Punjab, Mehta responded, adding that the government was examining the petition. Any decision, either way, may have some repercussions now, Mehta stressed. The court finally gave the government two weeks. Balwant Singh’s plea for Presidential mercy has been in limbo despite the government having decided over a year ago, in 2019, to spare his life in commemoration of the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev Ji. In a petition to the Supreme Court from his jail cell, Balwant Singh has said his repeated pleas to the government about the fate of the mercy plea were met with silence. He called the delay inexplicable. The mercy petition was filed in 2012.
F) Allahabad HC defers final hearing of writ against U.P. anti-conversion ordinance.
The Allahabad High Court has deferred the final hearing of the writ filed against the Uttar Pradesh Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Ordinance, 2020 to February 2, citing the petition moved by the Yogi Adityanath-led government to transfer the case to the Supreme Court. On Monday, the State government said an application to transfer the petition was pending in the apex court. Reports said the SC declined to accept the plea and said it would not intervene in the case. A HC Bench of Chief Justice Govind Mathur and Justice Siddhartha Varma listed the matter for February 2. The court is hearing a bunch of PILs challenging the constitutional validity of the ordinance.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
A) Biden to sign executive order to boost ‘Buy American’ rules.
U.S. President Joe Biden will sign an executive order on Monday requiring the federal government to increase its purchases of American goods, relative to foreign goods. Monday’s order asks agencies to update the existing ‘Buy American’ government procurement rules including by requiring an increase in the amount of domestic content that has to go into products being sold to the federal government and updating how the composition of products is measured. It also increased the government’s price differential for American products relative to foreign ones. The order also mandates the creation of a new senior position to oversee the Buy American programme and a website to publish any waivers to the sourcing requirements. Mr. Biden has been undoing a number of his predecessor Donald Trump’s policies such as those that were viewed as divisive, or harmed particular minority groups, or promoted American retrenchment from the world. However, Monday’s order is in the same thematic direction as at least some of Mr. Trump’s policies that sought to use the power of the federal government $600 billion a year in contracts to promote domestic rather than foreign industry. Some two-thirds of the purchases were made by the Defense Department. Manufacturing jobs have been on the decline in the U.S. over the last two decades, not just because sourcing abroad was more cost effective but also due to a significant increase in automation.
B) Israel extradites woman wanted for sex crimes.
Israeli authorities on Monday extradited a former teacher accused of sexually abusing her former students in Australia, capping a six-year legal battle that strained relations between the two governments and antagonized Australia’s Jewish community. Malka Leifer, who is wanted on 74 charges of child sex abuse in Australia, was placed on a flight early in the day, several hours before Israel was to close its international airport to nearly all air traffic due to a raging pandemic. Israeli media photographed Leifer boarding a plane at Ben Gurion Airport, her ankles and wrists shackled. Her lawyer, Nick Kaufman, confirmed the extradition. Leifer, a former teacher accused of sexually abusing several former students at a Jewish school in Melbourne, had been fighting extradition since 2014. Leifer, however, maintains her innocence. The protracted court case and repeated delays over her extradition had drawn criticism from Australian officials as well as the country’s Jewish leaders. This is an incredible day for justice! said Manny Waks, head of Voice against Child Sex Abuse, an organisation representing Leifer’s victims. They can now truly look forward to Leifer facing justice in Australia on the 74 charges, he said.
Q : 1 – 10 Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions. Certain words / phrases are given in bold to help you locate them while answering some of the questions.
“I promise to open a bank account for a British citizen in just two minutes”. With a background in IT banking and asset management, this young entrepreneur is submitting plans to the regulators to start a new bank called Lintel, the twominute pledge is one of his selling points. He reckons that he can do better than the existing banks, and is putting plenty of his own money where his mouth is, as part of the 5m ($7.5m) start-up cost. lie hopes to start doing business early next year. Since April, 2013, three new British banks have appeared and three outfits have taken over old licenses. An official at the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) who doles out banking licences is part of the Bank of England, says people are now applying to open banks in”unprecedented numbers.” Four applicants are likely to start operating this year, he says with a further four or so probably coming to market next year. At least as far as the consumer is concerned, banking could be on the verge of quite a shake-up. Since March, 2013, the process to apply for a license has been streamlined. The PRA claims that a new bank can be up and running just six months after final authorization. The capital requirements for the start-ups are lower than they used to be. And many of the new entrants are acting like classic entrepreneurs. They work out how the existing banks are failing customers then look for niches, whether in products, customers or technology. All are encouraged by the growing willingness of consumers to switch from one bank to another, stimulated in part by regulations designed to make this easier. One such niche market will be immigrants, both students on short-stay visas and longer-term economic migrants and new start-up banks promise to offer a full range of products, in many languages, digitally and also at a few branches, to be located at the most convenient places for his target customers such as the railway stations in London that serve Heathrow and Gatwick airports. Another niche (e.g. Atom Bank), by contrast, is technological. It will be the first British bank to be digital-only, with all transactions done through smartphones and tablets, via an app. This ought to lower the bank’s overheads. The banking sector is currently the subject of a review by the Competition and Markets Authority, an official watchdog. Most of the new entrants would agree with the authority’s criticism that some features of the traditional banking system “prevent, restrict or distort competition”, in relation to both personal customers and small businesses. They attack what they call the opaque pricing of many current accounts and view to drive change. The entrepreneurs also claim that their innovative new products and technologies will help to address some of those criticisms.
Q. 1 Choose the word which is most nearly the same in meaning to the word DOLES given in bold as used in the passage
A. Benefits
B. charity
C. sorrows
D. Handouts
E. issues
Q. 2 Choose the word which is most nearly the same in meaning to the word APPEARED given in bold as used in the passage
A. Performed
B. shown
C. survived
D. Lived
E. emerged
Q. 3 Which of the following is TRUE in the context of the passage?
A. Many large banks have collapsed and their place is being taken over by foreign banks
B. All present British banks largely offer digital services and are reducing physical branches
C. British banks are facing a financial crunch and need a stimulus from the government.
D. The Bank of England has improved the process of issuance of bank licenses.
E. None of the given options is true in the context of the passage
Q. 4 What is the author’s view regarding the start-up innovations in banking ?
A. These pose a threat to the banking system as they are not governed by stringent regulations.
B. Their operations are mainly online making it difficult for certain functions of their customers
C. These are providing an alternative to traditional banking and may transform the banking industry
D. These will not be very successful as customers are wary of leaving traditional banks.
E. Other than those given as options
Q. 5 Which of the following is the central idea of the passage ?
A. As new banks are being set-up, the nature of Banking will change in British
B. While many innovations are taking place in banking, banks lack capital to sustain these.
C. Bank credit in England is at an all time low present.
D. Technology is taking over banks puffing security at risk
E. Customers are unhappy with the central bank’s decision to encourage setting up of new risky banks.
Q. 6 What does the example of Lintel cited in the passage convey ?
A. New generation banks have grown bigger than conventional banks
B. Britain’s central bank is allowing banks to be setup indiscriminately
C. Quite a few new banks are being setup in Britain targeting certain customer needs.
D. Bypassing time-consuming but necessary regulations puts banks at risk
E. The Central Bank of England has to implement stricter regulatory measures.
Q. 7 Choose the word which is most opposite in meaning to the word CLASSIC given in bold as used in the passage
A. Remarkable
B. Stylish
C. Typical
D. Inexpensive
E. Usual
Q. 8 According to the passage, which of the following has/have impacted bank startups?
(A) Failure of foreign banks
(B) Eagerness of individual and companies to set up banks
(C) Changing loyalties of customers
A. Only B
B. Only A
C. All A, B and C
D. Only A and C
E. Only B and C
Q. 9 Which of the following best describes die Competition and Market Authority’s opinion of the traditional banking system ?
A. Its services and products are cheap and favour small businesses at the cost of robustness
B. It lacks transparency in its processes and its practices are not always fair.
C. Traditional banks are less profitable than new banks, despite the government’s efforts.
D. The quality of their services is not the same abroad and domestically causing distress to customers
E. Innovations are being brought in despite existing rules prohibiting these.
Q. 10 Choose the word which is most nearly the opposite in meaning to the word RESTRICT given in bold as used in the passage.
A. Exhibit
B. Encourage
C. chock
D. Exploit
E. contract
Questions: 11 – 15
Rearrange the given six sentences / group of sentences (A), (B), (C), (D), (E) and (F) to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the given questions.
A. Beneath its vaulting glass domes and mock renaissance murals are a Hello Kitty cafe, a half dozen noodle restaurants, jewellery shops dripping with gold and a theatre used for karaoke contests.
B. Unfortunately, owing to the demanding economy prospects for this mall are not good.
C. The Global Harbor mall in China once ranked among the World’s biggest shopping malls with its floor space equivalent to nearly 70 football fields.
D. With a mix of these utilities for consumers, it blends ersatz European architecture with a distinctly Asian election of stores.
E. As a result, bringing it back to its old position has become more urgent than ever.
F. It is only a slight exaggeration to say that China’s economic hopes rest on the faux- Corinthian columns of this mall.
Q. 11 Which of the following should be the FIFTH sentence after the rearrangement ?
A. E
B. B
C. A
D. F
E. C
Q. 12 Which of the following should be the SECOND sentence after the rearrangement?
A. A
B. B
C. F
D. U
E. E
Q. 13 Which of the following should be the FOURTH sentence after the rearrangement?
A. A
B. B
C. C
D. F
E. D
Q. 14 Which of the following should be the FIRST sentence after the rearrangement ?
A. A
B. C
C. B
D. F
E. D
Q. 15 Which of the following should be the SIXTH (last) sentence after the rearrangement ?
A. C
B. D
C. A
D. B
E. F
Questions: 16 – 20
Each question below has two blanks each blank indicating that something has been omitted Choose the set of words for each blank that best fits the meaning of the sentence as a whole.
Q. 16 Guests should look………to the new international artists who are………to perform this writer.
A. forward, scheduled
B. ahead,set
C. eagerly, lately
D. closer,likely
E. carefully ,about
Q. 17 ……….to a scientist, thousands of fossils be………inside a cave at the Word heritage site.
A. Exclusive, unclaimed
B. Relating, locally
C. Relying, behind
D. Pertaining, buried
E. According, untouched
Q. 18 Two months after ordering the authorities to ……… the scam, the court finally………to take the first step towards monitoring the investigation on Monday
A. look, seemed
B. investigate, assumed
C. search, decided
D. probe, appeared
E. delve, made
Q. 19 It has been ……… three months that the students of the institute began their strike ……. the appointment of the Chairman of the Council.
A. about ,of
B. more, opposing
C. close,for
D. over, against
E. around ,to
Q. 20 ….being unwell, the Minister………to continue his protests till the problem is resolved.
A. Although, wants
B. Despite, intends
C. Though, suggests
D. Since, prolongs
E. After, resolve
Questions: 21 – 25
Read each sentence to find out whether there is any grammatical mistake/error in it. The error, if any, will he in one part of the sentence. Mark the part with error as your answer. If there is no error, mark (5) as your answer.
Q. 21 With 80 percent of the working age population, already employed, there is limited room for employment growth to contribute strong about economic activities in the future.
A. With 80 percent of the working age population
B. already employed, there is limited room
C. for employment growth to contribute strong about
D. economic activities in the future.
E. no error
Q. 22 The global economy, slaved by stagnation in Europe and Japan, is being further hampered by England’s decelerating growth.
A. The global economy, slaved by
B. stagnation in Europe and Japan, is being
C. further hampered
D. by England’s decelerating growth.
E. no error
Q. 23 The country’s economic growth could be fade dramatically as the years to come owing to an aging population.
A. The country’s economic growth
B. could be fade dramatically
C. as the years to come
D. owing to an aging population
E. no error
Q. 24 The country’s economic growth will largely be stable in the third quarter as the impact of a stock market plunge is been lessened.
A. The country’s economic growth will
B. largely be stable in the third quarter
C. as the impact of a stock market plunge
D. is been lessened
E. No error
Q. 25 A major component supporting the nation’s rapid economic growth has been growth of exports.
A. A major component supporting
B. the nation’s rapid
C. economic growth has
D. been growth of exports.
E. No error
Questions: 26 – 30
In the following passage, there are blanks, each of which has been numbered. Against each, five words are suggested. One of which fits the blank appropriately.
Find out the appropriate word in each case.
India’s private-schooled, English-speaking urban elite may attract global attention, but they are in the …26…. The vast majority of Indian children attend government-run primary schools in rural areas. In 2008-2009, rural India …27… for more than 88% of India’s primary-school students, of whom over 87% were …28… in government run schools. This is where we see some of the nation’s toughest challenges. The number of students completing their primary education with …29… numeracy and literacy’ skills is startling. To see this manifest in an economic sense, one may attribute India’s slow productivity growth-lagging behind that of East Asian economics-to a lack of.. .30… in the foundational elements of countrywide, high-quality education.
Q. 26 Fill in the blanks
A. least
B. lurch
C. minority
D. future
E. past
Q. 27 Fill in the blanks
A. Amounted
B. totalized
C. accumulated
D. added
E. accounted
Q. 28 Fill in the blanks
A. bordered
B. existed
C. enrolled
D. hatred
E. proposed
Q. 29 Fill in the blanks
A. astute
B. inadequate
C. certain
D. pursued
E. together
Q. 30 Fill in the blanks
A. progress
B. contribution
C. particulars
D. boundaries
E. schools
Q. 31 A bag contains 6 red, 5 yellow and 3 pink balls. Two balls are drawn at random. What is the probability that none of the balls drawn are red in colour ?
A. 4/13
B. 8/13
C. 5/13
D. 2/13
E. 6/13
Q. 32 A vessel contains a mixture of apple, orange and mango juices in the respective ratio of 3 : 5 : 4. 12 litre of this mixture is taken out and 8 litre of apple juice is added to the mixture. If the respective quantities of apple juice and orange juice in the vessel are equal, what was the initial quantity of mixture in the vessel ? (in litre)
A. 60
B. 84
C. 96
D. 48
E. 72
Questions: 33 – 37
In these questions, two equations, numbered I and II are given. You have to solve both the equations and Give answer:
(1) x > y
(2) x > y
(3) x < y
(4) Relationship between x and y cannot be determined
(5) x < y
Q. 33 I.x²=81
II. y²+13y + 36 = 0
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 34 I.x²- 13x +14 = 0
II. 3y² -17y + 22 = 0
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 35 I.x²+ 9x + 9 = 0
II. 4y²+ 9y + 5 = 0
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 36 I. 2×2 – 11x + 14 = 0
II. 2y2 -7y + 6 = 0
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 37 I. x² – 7x + 12 = 0
II. 2y²– 19y + 44 = 0
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 38 A and B together can complete a piece of work in 16 days. B alone can complete the same work in 24 days. In how many days can A alone complete the same work ?
A. 38 days
B. 50 days
C. 48 days
D. 42 days
E. none of these
Q. 39 The average salary of A, B and C is Rs. 7,200/-. The average salary of B, C and D is Rs. 7,550/-. If D’s salary is 25% more than A’s salary, what is the average of B and C’s salary ?
A. Rs. 8,950/-
B. Rs. 8,450/
C. Rs. 8,300/-
D. Rs. 8,900/-
E. Rs. 8,700/-
Questions: 40 – 44
What will come in place of question mark (?) in the given questions ? (You are not expected to calculate the exact answer.)
Q. 40 9659 + 20.99 + 7.921 ÷ 11 .97 = ?
A. 960
B. 950
C. 1260
D. 1280
E. 1120
Q. 41 25.01% of 541 ÷ 29.97% of 30.01 + ? = 140
A. 90
B. 145
C. 125
D. 85
E. 110
Q. 42 1401 ÷ 34.97 + 21.98 x √626 = ?
A. 520
B. 650
C. 480
D. 590
E. 630
Q. 43 (12.5 x 14) ÷ 20 + 41.25 = ?³ ÷ 2.5
A. 6
B. 5
C. 3
D. 4
E. 7
Q. 44 √230 ÷ 2.017 + 58.794 = ?
A. 80
B. 102
C. 68
D. 96
E. 77
Q. 45 B is 8 years elder to A and B is also 8 years younger to C. 12 years hence, the respective ratio between the ages of A and C will be 5 : 9. What is the sum of present ages of A, B and C ?
A. 32 years
B. 48 years
C. 72 years
D. 42 years
E. 36 years
Q. 46 To reach Point B at 10 a.m. from Point A, Abni will have to travel at an average speed of 15 km/h. He will reach point B at 12 p.m., if he travels at an average speed of 10 km/h. At what average speed should Abhi travel to reach Point B at 9 a.m. ?
A. 20 km/h
B. 18 km/h
C. 16 km/h
D. 24 km/h
E. 22 km/h
Q. 47 The time taken by a boat to travel a distance upstream is twice the time taken by it to travel the same distance downstream. What is the speed of the boat upstream if it travels 20 km downstream in 1 hour 40 min ? (in km/h)
A. 5.5
B. 6.
C. 6.5
D. 8
E. 4
Questions: 48 – 52
What will come in place of question mark (?) in the given number series ?
Q. 48 10 10 16 40 100 ?
A. 220
B. 300
C. 200
D. 150
E. 340
Q. 49 4 5.8 9.4 16.6 ? 59.8
A. 40
B. 31
C. 20
D. 42
E. 34
Q. 50 7 6 10 27 104 ?
A. 297
B. 439
C. 515
D. 386
E. 624
Q. 51 9 4 3 3 4 ?
A. 11
B. 7.5
C. 9.5
D. 12.5
E. 8
Q. 52 139 135 128 116 97 ?
A. 69
B. 55
C. 71
D. 82
E. 63
Q. 53 The respective ratio of the sum invested for 2 years each in Scheme A offering 10% p.a. compound interest (compounded annually) and in Scheme B offering 8% simple interest is 1: 2. Difference between the interests earned from both the schemes is Rs. 990/-. How much was invested in Scheme A ?
A. Rs.9,500/-
B. Rs.9,000/-
C. Rs.12,000/-
D. Rs. 11,000/-
E. Rs. 10,000/-
Questions: 54 – 58
Refer to the table and answer the give questions.
Data related to candidates appeared and qualified from State ‘X’ in the competitive exam during 5 years
Q. 54 In 2003, if the number of female qualified candidates was 70, what was the respective ratio of number of female qualified candidates and number of male qualified candidates in the same year ?
A. 5:9
B. 7:11
C. 10:11
D. 10:13
E. 5:7
Q. 55 Number of appeared candidates increased by 20% from 2002 to 2006. If 25% of the appeared candidates qualified in 2006, what was the number of qualified candidates in 2006 ?
A. 205
B. 215
C. 245
D. 240
E. 230
Q. 56 If the average number of qualified candidates in 2002 and 2005 was 433, what percent of appeared candidates qualified in the competitive exam in 2002 ?
A. 60
B. 75
C. 45
D. 70
E. 50
Q. 57 In 2004, if the difference between number of male qualified candidates and number of female qualified candidates was 120, What was the number of appeared candidates in 2004 ?
A. 840
B. 800
C. 660
D. 600
E. 720
Q. 58 In 2001, the respective ratio of number of appeared candidates to qualified candidates was 5 : 2. Number of female candidates qualified in 2001 constitutes what percent of the number of appeared candidates in the same year?
A. 15%
B. 25%
C. 125%
D. 20%
E. Cannot be determined
Q. 59 If the volume and covered surface area of a cylinder are 462 m³ and 264 m² respectively, what is the total surface area of the cylinder ? (in m²)
A. 351
B. 357
C. 363
D. 339
E. 341
Questions: 60 – 64
Refer to the graph and answer the Number of visitors in Country “XYZ” from City A and City B
Q. 60 The number of visitors from City A in May is what percent less than the number of visitors from City B in July ?
A. 15%
B. 25%
C. 30%
D. 10%
E. 20%
Q. 61 What is the average number of visitors from City B in May, June, August and September ?
A. 260
B. 230
C. 265
D. 245
E. 255
Q. 62 What is the difference between the total number of visitors from City A and City B together in September and the total number of visitors from both the cities together in August ?
A. 170
B. 120
C. 130
D. 140
E. 150
Q. 63 The number of visitors from City A in April increased by 20% from the previous month. What is the respective ratio between the number of visitors from City A in July and the number of visitors from the same city in March?
A. 18 : 7
B. 19 : 7
C. 17 : 8
D. 19:5
E. 18:5
Q. 64 The number of visitors from City B increased by what percent from April to June?
A. 132%
B. 120%
C. 133 1/3%
D. 134%
E. 127 2/3%
Q. 65 ‘A’ gave 40% of an amount to ‘B’. From the money B got, he paid 20% to a tax. Out of the remaining amount, the amounts paid by B towards tuition fees and towards library membership are in the respective ratio of 3 : 5. If B paid Rs. 1,720/- as library membership fees, how much money did A have at the beginning ?
A. Rs. 9,000/-
B. Rs. 12,400/-
C. Rs. 12,000/-
D. Rs. 8,000/
E. Rs. 8,600/-
Questions: 66 – 70
Study the following information to answer the given questions.
Seven people, namely O, P, Q, R, S, T and U will attend a farewell but not necessarily in the same order, in seven different months (of the same year) namely February, March, April, May, July, October and December. Each of them also likes different stationary items namely Pen, Stapler, Ruler, Folder, Envelope, Label and Worksheet but not necessarily in the same order. The one who likes Envelope will attend a farewell in a month which has less than 31 days. Only one person will attend a farewell between the one who likes Envelope and O. The one who likes Ruler will attend a farewell immediately before O. Q will attend a farewell immediately after O. P will attend a farewell in one of the months before Q. Only two people will attend a farewell between Q and P. U will attend a farewell in a month which has less than 31 days. T will attend a farewell immediately after U. Only one person will attend a farewell between O and the one who likes folder. U likes neither open nor stapler. The one who likes pen will attend a farewell immediately before the one who likes Worksheet. S does not like Ruler.
Q. 66 Which of the following represents the people who will attend a farewell in March and October respectively ?
A. T,Q
B. T,O
C. U,O
D. U,Q
E. T,S
Q. 67 Which of the following represents the month in which R will attend a farewell ?
A. may
B. cannot be determined
C. july
D. october
E. march
Q. 68 How many people will attend a farewell between the months in which U and O will attend a farewell ?
A. more than 3
B. 3
C. none
D. 2
E. 1
Q. 69 As per the given arrangement, February is related to Envelope and March is related to Ruler, which of the following is July related to following the same pattern ?
A. label
B. pen
C. folder
D. worksheet
E. stapler
Q. 70 Which of the following stationary does S like ?
A. worksheet
B. label
C. pen
D. folder
E. stapler
Questions: 71 – 75
Study the following information to answer the given questions.
J, K, L, M, Q, R, S and T are sitting around a circular table facing the centre with equal distances between each other (but not necessarily in the same order). Each One of them is also related to M in same way or the other. Only two people sit between Q and L. M sits second to the left of Q. Only three people sit between L and M’s wife. M’s son sits second to the right of M’s wife. Only three people sit between M’s son and M’s brother. M’s daughter sits second to the left of M’s brother. J sits to the immediate right of R. R is neither the son nor the wife of M. M’s sister sits second to the left of R. K. sits to the immediate right of M’s sister. Only two people sit between K and M’s father. T sits second to the right of M’s mother.
Q. 71 How many people sit between Q and J, when counted from the left of J?
A. 4
B. 1
C. none
D. 5
E. 2
Q. 72 How is K related to R?
A. brother
B. nephew
C. daughter-in law
D. uncle
E. mother
Q. 73 Who sits second to the right of R?
A. R
B. M’s brother
C. T
D. M’s daughter
E. K
Q. 74 Who amongst the following is the wife of M ?
A. Q
B. K
C. N
D. J
E. O
Q. 75 Which of the following statements is true with respect to the given information ?
A. All the given statements are true
B. M sits second to the left of L
C. K is an immediate neighbour of R
D. S is the daughter of L
E. R sits second to the right of M’s wife
Questions: 76 – 80
Study the following information to answer the given questions.
Ten people are sitting in two parallel rows containing five people each, in such a way that there is equal distance between adjacent persons. In row 1-T, U, V, W and X are seated (not necessarily in the same order) and all of them are facing north. In row 2-D, E, F, G and H are seated (not necessarily in the same order) and all of them are facing south. Therefore, in the given seating arrangement, each member seated in a row faces another member of the other row. V sits exactly in the middle of the row. The person facing V sits to the immediate left of F. H is an immediate neighbour of F. W sits second to the left of U. U faces one of the immediate neighbours of E. G is not an immediate neighbour of D. G does not sit at an extreme end of the line. X does not face D.
Q. 76 Who amongst the following is facing E ?
A. X
B. T
C. U
D. V
E. W
Q. 77 What is the position of G with respect to H ?
A. Third to the right
B. Second to the right
C. Second to the left
D. Immediate right
E. Immediate lef
Q. 78 Which of the following statements is true regarding X ?
A. Only two persons sit between X and U
B. X faces one of the immediate neighbours of F
C. W is an immediate neighbour of X
D. None of the given statements is true
E. X sits at an extreme ends of the line
Q. 79 Who amongst the following is facing T ?
A. E
B. H
C. D
D. F
E. G
Q. 80 Four of the given five are alike in a certain way based on the given arrangement and hence form a group. Which of them does not belong to that group ?
A. XW
B. D F
C. F E
D. T U
E. G D
Questions: 81 – 85
Study the following information answer the given questions.
In a certain code language, ‘offer prayers to god’ is written as ‘bi gv oc st’ ‘prayers for school assembly’ is written as ‘tm oc da pu’ ‘school offer special education’ is written as ‘nh mk tm gv ‘assembly must to school’ is written as ‘da st rx tm’ (All codes are two letter codes only)
Q. 81 In the given code language, what does the code ‘mk’ stand for?
A. either offer or to
B. god
C. school
D. Either ‘education’ or ‘special’
E. must
Q. 82 What is the code for ‘assembly’ in the given code language ?
A. tm
B. rx
C. st
D. da
E. Other than those given as options
Q. 83 What is the code for ‘prayers’ in the given code language ?
A. nh
B. oc
C. gv
D. pu
E. rx
Q. 84 What may be the possible code for ‘assembly ground’ in the given code language ?
A. ve bi
B. da nh
C. nh ve
D. ve da
E. bi da
Q. 85 If ‘school to home’ is written as ‘aj tm st’ in the given code language, then what is the code for ‘home for god’ ?
A. aj gv nh
B. pu aj bi
C. nh bi pu
D. bi da aj
E. aj oc pu
Questions: 86 – 88
Study the following information to answer the given questions.
Each of the six salespersons viz, U, V, W, X, Y and Z sells a different number of life insurance policies in a day. U sells more policies than Y and Z but less than X. Z sells more policies than only W. X does not sell the most number of policies. The one who sells the third highest number of policies sells 33 policies and the one who sells the lowest number of policies sells 11 policies in a day. Y sells 13 more policies than W.
Q. 86 If the number of policies which V sells in a day is less than 47, and is an odd number which is divisible by 3 but not 5, how many policies does he sell ?
A. 24
B. 45
C. 39
D. 27
E. 21
Q. 87 How many policies does Z possibly sell ?
A. 19
B. 26
C. 30
D. 24
E. 41
Q. 88 Who amongst the following sells the second highest number of policies in a day ?
A. v
B. Y
C. W
D. X
E. Z
Questions: 89 – 93
In these questions, relationship between different elements is shown in the statements. The statements are followed by conclusions. Study the conclusions based on the given statements and select the appropriate answer.
Give answer:
(1) If only conclusion II is true
(2) If only conclusion I is true
(3) If both conclusions I and II are true
(4) If either conclusion I or II is true
(5) If neither conclusion I nor II is true
Q. 89 Statements : F < R < E > A > K; Y > E
Conclusions : I. A > F II. R < K
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 90 Statements : B < R < E = A > D > S; D > C < J
Conclusions : I. D > B ; II. E > S
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 91 Statements: A > B > C < D < E < F
Conclusions : I. C < F ; II. A > E
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 92 Statements : B < R < E = A > D > S; D > C < J
Conclusions : I. J < B ; II. J = B
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 93 Statements : F < R < E > A > K; Y > E
Conclusions : I. Y > K ; II. F < Y
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Questions: 94 – 95
Study the following information to answer the given questions
❖ K is the brother of J. J is the mother of Y
❖ Y is the sister of T. T is married to Q. S is the father of J
❖ S has only one daughter. S is married to R
❖ K is the brother of D. U is the father-in-law of D
Q. 94 How is D related to Y ?
A. Cannot be determined
B. mother
C. uncle
D. father
E. aunt
Q. 95 If U is the father of C, then how is D related to C ?
A. cousin
B. husband
C. wife
D. cannot be determined
E. brother
Questions: 96 – 100
In these questions, two statements followed by two/three conclusions numbered I and II have been given. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance from commonly known facts. Read all the conclusions and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statements disregarding commonly known facts.
Give answer:
(1) If only conclusion II is true
(2) if only conclusion I is true
(3) If both conclusions I and II are true
(4) If either conclusion I or II is true
(5) If neither conclusion I nor II is true
Q. 96 Statements: All points are views. No view is an idea. Some ideas are thoughts.
Conclusions: I. Some thoughts being points is a possibility. II. No view is a thought.
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 97 Statements: All points are views. No view is an idea. Some ideas are thoughts.
Conclusions: At least some ideas are points. II. All thoughts being ideas is a possibility
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 98 Statements: Some slides are photos. All photos arc images. All images are creations.
Conclusions :
I. At least some images are slides.
II. All photos are creations.
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 99 Statements : No loss is profit. Some profits are gains.
Conclusions:
I. No gain is a loss
II. Some gains are losses.
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Q. 100 Statements : No space is a gap. All tissues are gaps. No gap is a crack.
Conclusions:
I. No space is a crack.
II. No tissue is crack.
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
E. 5
Answer Sheet
Question
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Answer
E
E
D
C
A
C
C
E
E
B
Question
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Answer
A
D
D
B
E
E
E
B
D
B
Question
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Answer
C
E
B
D
E
C
E
C
B
A
Question
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
Answer
B
A
E
E
C
B
E
C
E
D
Question
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
Answer
C
D
B
C
B
A
B
A
B
C
Question
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
Answer
B
A
B
E
B
A
B
A
E
B
Question
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
Answer
D
D
E
C
B
A
A
B
C
E
Question
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
Answer
E
C
C
B
C
A
E
E
C
B
Question
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
Answer
D
D
B
D
B
C
A
D
E
A
Question
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
Answer
B
E
C
B
A
B
A
C
D
A
×
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