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Banned drugs sold in India that you should avoid articles Page - From www.HumNRI.com

India has become a dumping ground for banned drugs also the business for production of banned drugs is blooming. Plz make sure that u buy drugs only if prescribed by a doctor(Also, ask which company manufactures it, this would help to ensure that u get what is prescribed at the Drug Store) and that also from a reputed drug store. Not many people know about these banned drugs and consume them causing a lot of damage to themselves.
 
Banned Drugs commonly available in India..Very Carefull

Please Read Very Carefully - INFORM ALL YOUR FRIENDS & FAMILY MEMBERS

India has become a dumping ground for banned drugs; also the business for production of banned drugs is booming. Plz make sure that u buy drugs only if prescribed by a doctor(Also, ask which company manufactures it, this would help to ensure that u get what is prescribed at the Drug Store) and that also from a reputed drug store. Not many people know about these banned drugs and consume them causing a lot of damage to themselves. We forward Jokes and other junk all the time. This is far more important.

Please Make sure u forward it everyone u know.

DANGEROUS DRUGS HAVE BEEN GLOBALLY DISCARDED BUT ARE AVAILABLE IN INDIA . The most common ones are action 500 & Nimulid.

Banned Drugs commonly available in India..Very Carefull | Gleez
 
India: a market for banned drugs - The Financial Express

New Delhi, Jul 5 : Thanks to a virtually “absent” adverse drug reaction mechanism in the country, drugs like Analgin, Cisapride, Nimesulide, and Piperazine, discarded worldwide due to serious side effects, are among the bestsellers in India. According to a report of the World Health Organisation, there has not been a single instance of adverse drug reaction reported against any drug in the country.

The country has become a dumping ground for discarded drugs and the business of production of these drugs is booming. Some of the most common ones include Nise (Dr Reddy’s), Nimulid (Panacea Biotec) that are discarded for reported liver damage, while Vicks Action 500 from the stable of Procter and Gamble is discarded for increasing chances of brain haemorrhage. Anti-depressant drug Droperol (produced by Triokka) has been discarded for irregular heartbeats in patients, an industry expert told FE. Anti-diarrhoeal drug Furoxone (from the house of Glaxo) was withdrawn from the market after reports of cancer in some patients, who were administered the drug, editor, Monthly Index of

Medical Specialities, CM Gulati, said.

India’s contribution to the worldwide collection of data on the side effects of different drugs is dismal. Countries like Ireland, Switzerland and Italy, with a population of about 4 million, 33 million and 57 million, respectively, had submitted 25, 33, and 225 adverse drug reaction on nimesulide. However, India, with over 1 billion population did not report any. Another drug Sildenafil (erectile dysfunction drug) had 18 adverse drug reactions reported from Australia but none from India.

According to a health ministry source, monitoring of adverse drug reaction is not followed in the curriculum for medical students in India, and majority of doctors do not maintain records on patients.

Assessing adverse drug reaction is not an easy task and in a developed country like the US not more than 10% of the side effects are recorded, he added.
 
India has become a dumping ground for banned drugs

India has become a dumping ground for banned drugs; also the business for production of banned drugs is blooming. Plz make sure that u buy drugs only if prescribed by a doctor (Also, ask which company manufactures it, this would help to ensure that u get what is prescribed at the Drug Store) and that also from a reputed drug store. Not many people know about these banned drugs and consume them causing a lot of damage to themselves.

India has become a dumping ground for banned drugs
 
Ping An to buy stake in Shenzhen Development Bank(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-06-13 09:09

China Ping An Insurance (Group), the nation's second largest insurer, said late Friday that it planned to buy stake worth up to a combined 22 billion yuan ($3.2 billion) in Shenzhen Development Bank.

Ping An said in an online statement that it had agreed to purchase up to 585 million new shares from Shenzhen Development Bank for 10.7 billion yuan, or 18.26 yuan per share.

The company said it would also buy 520 million shares from the US-based TPG's Asian arm Newbridge Capital for 11.45 billion yuan by the end of 2010. Newbridge Capital is currently the top shareholder in Shenzhen Development Bank.

The two deals would enable Ping An to acquire a nearly 30-percent stake in Shenzhen Development Bank, and become its top shareholder.

But the deals still need regulatory approval from the government.

Frank Newman, president of Shenzhen Development Bank, said the deals would enhance the bank's capital adequacy ratio, and is good to its long-term development.

Ma Mingzhe, president of Ping An, said the move is in accordance with the company's strategy to engage in more comprehensive financial services and achieve a balanced growth in insurance, banking and investment.

The Ping An Group, together with Ping An Life Insurance, currently holds a 4.68 percent stake in Shenzhen Development Bank.

Ping An to buy stake in Shenzhen Development Bank
 
Indian drugs law is horrible. They make composite drugs and are banned in most of the countries including BD. Composite drug means you put multiple compound in one single drug, for instance in a antibiotic capsule you put 6 different kind of ingredients thinking, if one does not work then the other will. It reduces the necessity of diagnosing the exact cause of diesease.
 
Niche in Europe for China cars?
By Li Fangfang (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-15 08:08'

The ongoing financial crisis that has hit Western countries especially hard is now giving China's homegrown auto brands some traction in Europe, a must-win battlefield for all international manufacturers.

"If they (Chinese automakers) do it in Europe, they can do it everywhere," said Hans-Ulrich Sachs, managing director of HSO Motors Europe, sales agent for China's Brilliance Jinbei Automobile Co Ltd in Germany.

"I believe Chinese auto brands will have a shorter journey to go than their Japanese and Korean counterparts did decades ago," said Detthold Aden, president and CEO of BLG Automobile Logistics, Germany's biggest logistics company, which is based in the northern port city Bremen.

Aden said he believes that the financial crisis, which makes smaller and cheaper cars popular, provides Chinese medium- and low-end vehicles the best opportunity in Europe.

To boost car sales the German government this January began providing subsidies of 2,500 euros to consumers for every vehicle more than nine years old that is traded for a new car with a smaller engine capacity.

In April, the government raised total funds available for subsidies to 5 billion euros from an initial 1.5 billion euros in the scheme that will expire at the end of the year.

"It is (a chance for) a niche market for Chinese auto brands," said Aden.

Tong Zhiyuan, president of China's Huatai Automobile Group, agrees with Aden. "It's an opportunity for Chinese cars to enter Europe when local markets cry out for small cars with low prices and good performance."

Tong added that by starting in the small car segment, Chinese carmakers can escape a face-down with legendary European rivals in the medium-sized car market.

As one of the largest automobile logistics suppliers in the world with more than 130 years of experience, BLG is "able to support the Chinese OEMs in any direction", said Michael Bnning, BLG's sales and marketing director.

But Europe's high standards for security, the environment, styling, safety and performance are major hurdles for Chinese carmakers.

"They will have to cooperate with local industry players," said Bnning. "More than 500 experienced technicians in our technique center will help Chinese cars overcome some problems and meet local standards."

The company will also manage all necessary compliance and customs papers before Chinese cars enter the market.

Over the past year, BLG and HSO helped Brilliance to improve its emissions to meet the required Euro IV standard.

Feng Ping, vice-president of Chery Automobile Co Ltd in charge of international business, told China Business Weekly that Chery is considering contracting with BLG for pre-delivery inspection (PDI) on Chery cars in Gioia Tauro harbor in Italy.

'Same direction'

Last year, BLG transported 10,000 Chery cars from China to Russia that were offloaded at Bremerhaven harbor in north Germany.

"PDI services, which double-checks the quality and parts and maintains and cleans cars after the long ship journey, prepare brand-new cars for showrooms. It's good for our brand image that the cars have no defects prior to receipt by dealers," said Feng.

BLG, the comprehensive logistics partner for Mercedes-Benz, also said it can and would like to help Chinese automakers establish their overseas manufacturing facilities in Eastern Europe.

BLG is now providing a logistics services package for South Korea's Hyundai Motors' manufacturing base in the Czech Republic. It delivers auto parts to the facility and then transports assembled vehicles to 43 countries.

"As Chinese cars now focus on the Russian market, BLG has also made huge investment to expand its logistics network in Eastern Europe. We - BLG and the Chinese - are going in the same direction," said Manfred Kuhr, deputy chairman of BLG's executive board.

BLG's logistics network, which uses vessels, railways and trucks, can provide transport to Chinese cars or their CKD - complete knocked down - and SKD - semi-knocked down - assembles to Russia, currently the prominent destination for Chinese car exporters, Kuhr said.

"Around 30 years ago, when Japan's Toyota delivered its first car in Europe from Bremerhaven, one of the largest automobile harbors in the world, people thought it was impossible for Toyota to sell cars in Western countries. Today Toyota is the world's top auto manufacturer," said Kuhr.

He noted that when BLG and HSO helped the South Korean brand Hyundai enter the European market 19 years ago, Europeans also looked down on them.

"Yet 350,000 cars under the Hyundai brand and 150,000 Kia cars were sold in Europe last year. Now it's China's turn," said Kuhr.

Chinese auto brands, including Chery, Great Wall and Geely, now have a share of the Russian and Ukrainian markets. Only Brilliance has gone into western Europe, using HSO's 850 dealerships.

HSO sold 800 Brillance cars in Europe in 2008 and aims to increase the number to 3,000 this year, then extend distribution to France, Spain and Italy. According to a distribution agreement signed in 2006, HSO will help Brilliance sell 15,800 cars in Europe within five years.

"Last year, 24.63 percent of the cars on the road in Europe came from outside the continent, the majority from Japan and South Korea," said Sachs. "According to our survey, 25 percent of the Eurozone's 200 million drivers said that they wouldn't say 'no' to Chinese auto brands."

In addition to Brilliance, Great Wall, BYD and Huatai also have ambitions in Europe.

Xing Wenlin, vice-president of Hebei's Great Wall Motor Co, told China Business Weekly that his company "will go to Eastern Europe markets within two years and enter Western Europe in three to five".

Shenzhen-based BYD Auto said that it will export its electric cars to Europe one or two years after they enter the US in 2011.

"We will start selling our cars in Eastern Europe and the south in the near future," said Tong of Huatai, who declined to disclose a detailed export plan before his company starts production in its new factory in Inner Mongolia in July.
 
China's industrial output up 8.9% in May(Xinhua)

China's industrial output expanded 8.9 percent in May from a year earlier, faster than the 7.3 percent rate in April, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Friday.

The figure exceeded analysts' forecasts of less than 8 percent. It was the highest monthly growth rate since October last year, said the NBS in a statement on its website.

Large industrial enterprises (those with annual revenue of more than 5 million yuan, or about $714,285), also reported May output growth of 8.9 percent.

Their expansion rate was 7.1 percentage points less than a year earlier but 1.6 percentage points above that of April.

The sales ratio of industrial products for May was 97.34 percent, 0.49 percentage point lower than a year earlier.

Output of many major products rose. Auto production rose 29 percent to 1.15 million units. The output of steel was up 7.4 percent to 57.29 million tonnes and coal was up 9.6 percent to 250 million tonnes.

Power generation, however, fell 2.7 percent to 283.89 billion kilowatt-hours and crude oil output was down 1.1 percent to 16.03 million tonnes.

Zhuang Jian, a senior economist with the Asian Development Bank, said the higher rate in May was a positive signal and might mean the country could achieve its 8-percent economic growth goal for 2009.

The NBS statement attributed the faster-than-expected industrial output growth to six factors.

First, a rebound in the growth rate of heavy industry, which accounts for about 70 percent of all large industrial enterprises. The growth rate of heavy industry recovered from continued declines since last September to 8.6 percent in May, 1.7 percentage points faster than April.

Second, almost three-quarters of all 39 industrial categories saw their growth rates accelerate in May compared with April. For instance, the high-tech industry grew 7.3 percent, 2.6 percentage points faster than April.

Third, the output of nearly 60 percent of all 494 industrial products grew faster than the previous month.

Fourth, 20 of the 31 provincial regions reported higher growth rates. Economic powerhouse Guangdong Province posted a growth rate that was 3.2 percentage points faster than April.

Fifth, output in quake-hit Sichuan Province grew 32.5 percent in May, compared with 3.6 percent in May 2008 when it was hit by the deadly earthquake.

Finally, excluding the quake factor, the national growth rate of industrial output was 1 percentage point faster than in April. Meanwhile, the contraction in power generation was 0.8 percentage point less than in April, showing that power output was consistent with industrial production.
 
Foreign investment freefall eases
By Ding Qingfen (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-16 07:46

Foreign direct investment (FDI) has been in decline for eight months, but the size of the fall in May was smaller than the one in April, probably signaling an easing off.

In comparison with other economies, China is still poised to be among the first choices for global investors in the next five years, the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) said.

According to the figures released by the ministry yesterday, in May, the FDI dropped 17.8 percent compared to a year earlier - equaling $6.38 billion. The number of newly approved foreign enterprises contracted by 32 percent to 1,649.

The figures exclude those in the financial sector.

00221917e13e0ba124d005.jpg


But May's performance was better than April's, when the FDI registered a negative growth of 22.5 percent.

Between January and May, the FDI fell by 20.4 percent year-on-year to $34.05 billion and newly approved foreign enterprises dropped by 33.8 percent to 7,890.

In the same period, foreign investment in China's central and western regions fell by 35.7 - more than the national average. Newly approved foreign enterprises fell 30.2 percent. For several years prior to the financial crisis, the regions had seen higher rates than the national average.

Yao Jian, a MOFCOM's spokesman, noted the central and western regions' sharp decline: "The coastal areas have the advantage of having gathered a much larger number of foreign investment enterprises in the last three decades."

Encouraged by confidence from global investors in China's 4 trillion yuan stimulus plan, the "decline in FDI will probably be slowing during the rest of the year," predicted Li Jianfeng, macro-economics and trade analyst with Shanghai Securities, a domestic brokerage.

"There is a good chance that the FDI will register a positive growth in the last quarter, given the low reference point in 2008," he added.

During the first quarter, the FDI decline showed some signs of bottoming out. But in April, the performance went down again by 22.5 percent, compared with a decline of 9.5 percent in March.

At the same time, the International Monetary Fund predicted China's GDP would grow by 6.7 percent this year, 1.3 percentage points lower than the Chinese government's target, but higher than the 5.25 percent of India and 5 percent for Vietnam, two countries vying for FDI.

The stimulus plan is having an effect, said Yao, who pointed out that retail volume rose to 4.88 trillion yuan in the first five months, up by 15 percent year-on-year.

Yao predicted that in 2009, China's FDI will contract by an annualized 20 percent in contrast to last year's growth of 27.65 percent.
 
May fiscal data point to 'recovery'
By Zhang Ran (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-16 08:08

An up-tick in China's fiscal revenue situation signals a recovery in the economy and gives the government more room to use active fiscal measures to boost it, experts said.

And, June to October would be the key period when the treasury would be able to judge whether it can realize an earlier target of 8 percent year on year revenue growth, they pointed out.

China's nationwide fiscal revenue was up 4.8 percent in May from a year earlier, at 656.9 billion yuan, reversing the downward trend of the past few months, the Ministry of Finance (MOF) said yesterday. The national revenue in April had dropped 13.6 percent from a year earlier. And, combined central and local government revenues in the first five months totaled 2.71 trillion yuan, a fall of 6.7 percent year on year.

"The rise in May is a signal the economy is recovering. Hopefully, starting from May, the national fiscal revenue would begin to show positive growth," Jia Kang, president of the Institute of Fiscal Science, Ministry of Finance said.

According to Zhao Quanhou, a senior researcher at the same institute, the reason why May figures have turned positive was because many projects that were included in the government's 4-trillion yuan stimulus plan last year were launched only recently.

"Though the stimulus plan was announced in November, many of projects were actually launched in spring, and is now starting to contribute to the economic growth," Zhao said.

Experts pointed out that May revenue growth leaves much room for the treasury to use more fiscal measures to stimulate the economy.

"Despite that, there still is huge pressure on China to realize an 8 percent revenue growth in 2009," Jia warned.

In a statement on its website, the ministry said the economic slowdown and tax cuts were the underlying factors behind the fall in fiscal revenue in the January-May period.

"The key period is from June to October. We need to watch closely the figures in the coming months, and see if the economy is really starting to recover," Zhao said.

The Chinese government expects revenue to grow 8 percent in 2009, much slower than previous years. Its revenue climbed 18.8 percent in 2008 and 32.4 percent in 2007.
 
IPOs back after long suspensionBy Bi Xiaoning (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-19 07:31

The securities regulator appears to have lifted a nine-month ban on initial public offerings, or IPOs, by reportedly approving the listing of a medium-sized drug firm.


The official China Securities Journal reported on its website late Thursday that Guilin Sanjin Pharmaceutical Co had received a regulatory notice from the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) allowing it to seek a stock exchange listing.

Earlier reports said that Guilin Sanjin, along with Zhejiang Wanma Group Cable and Shenzhen Salubris Pharmaceutical, had applied to be listed on the small- to medium-sized enterprises board on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

The share offer by Guilin Sanjin, a traditional Chinese medicine maker, is likely to mark the resumption of IPOs, which have been quietly suspended since September after the Shanghai Composite Index had fallen by almost 60 percent in the first nine months.

The stock market collapse was attributed, at least partly, to the drain of liquidity by the large number of IPOs by enterprises keen on tapping the market to prepare for leaner economic times ahead.

The suspension also created an opportunity for the CSRC to revise the IPO rules and the subscription mechanism that were seen to have been abused by some financial intermediaries, resulting in unfair distribution of new shares and price volatility after trading began.

Initial drafts of the new IPO rules were circulated among financial intermediaries for comments; and the final draft incorporating some of their feedback was published earlier this month.

Stockbrokers and investors generally welcomed the IPO resumption, saying it would allow the stock exchange to regain its basic function of providing capital to fund the growth of the corporate sector.

But they also warned that the expected stampede by the many cash-starved private companies to tap new capital could put a strain on liquidity and short-circuit the market recovery.

The lifting of the IPO ban is not surprising, said Zhao Xijun, a professor of finance at Renmin University of China.

"Facilitating the raising of capital by enterprises is the primary function of the stock market," he said, adding it is a positive move in line with the government policy of stimulating domestic demand.

Li Daxiao, a director of Yingda Securities, said it is important for the CSRC to regulate the pace of new listings

Sources said the CSRC's listing panel has reviewed the IPO applications of 33 companies of various businesses and sizes.

They include corporate heavyweights such as China State Construction Engineering Corp, Everbright Securities and Sichuan Expressway. The companies are expected to raise at least 1 billion yuan each.

Market worries about a liquidity drain were clearly demonstrated in the nearly 2 percent fall of the benchmark index last Friday on rumors of an impending large IPO from China State Construction.

"I believe the CSRC will exercise great care in minimizing the potential impact of a rush of capital after the IPO ban is lifted," Li said.

IPOs back after long suspension
 
China is shining.Will we next supreme power within 10 years.

Wont agree with you on this, definately China is on a road of being a super power, but in next 10 years, hmmmm i dont think so. Would take some more time for china to be there condisering the current situation.
 
Nation may hike US debt in short term(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-19 09:26

China could still increase its holdings of US Treasuries if the dollar is stable, even though the long-term trajectory is to diversify its foreign exchange reserves, a former central bank governor said in an essay.

The nation will need some time to diversify its foreign- exchange reserve holdings and the US government should take "substantial" measures to honor its promise of ensuring the safety of foreign investments, Dai Xianglong, former head of the People's Bank of China (PBOC) and currently chairman of China's National Social Security Fund (NSSF), wrote in an article in the Chinese-language publication China Finance.

China's yuan will "surely become a significant currency for international reserves after years of efforts". The gradual process will include letting foreign governments and businesses obtain the currency through loans, yuan-denominated bond sales in China, trade payments and currency-swap agreements, according to Dai's article.

The government is pushing for the opening up of China's capital accounts to expand the nation's outbound investments, Dai wrote. Eleven such accounts, out of a total 43 monitored by the International Monetary Fund, remained unconvertible as of March.

A number of senior Chinese officials have voiced concern recently about Beijing's exposure to US debt, given what they see as a mounting medium-term risk of inflation in the US.

About 70 percent of China's $1.95 trillion in foreign exchange reserves is held in dollar assets.

The article echoed similar comments he made last week that Beijing has little choice but to keep buying US debt.

"It is still possible for China to increase its investment in US Treasuries at appropriate times," Dai wrote in the article in China Finance magazine, which is backed by the PBOC.

But Dai said that it was not correct to "simply describe the current situation of China's foreign-exchange reserve management as one of falling into a 'dollar trap'".

Reuters-Bloomberg
 
Wont agree with you on this, definately China is on a road of being a super power, but in next 10 years, hmmmm i dont think so. Would take some more time for china to be there condisering the current situation.

I think with in 10 years they will supreme power. Have u noticed How much say CHINA has now in world affairs?I think After US China is coming into picture these days. India is nowhere near dude...I am also feeling bad.Now All depends upon MMS Govt. I have lot of hope from him. Lets see what can he do? Next 5 years will be the golden year of Indian economy...I hope i am not expecting too much.....

Jai Ho!!!:victory:
 
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