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OECD wants India to ease FDI norms on banking, insurance
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) today lauded India"s overseas investment policies but asked for relaxation in foreign direct investments (FDI) norms for banking and insurance sector.

SC upholds law on office of profit
The Supreme Court today upheld an amendment exempting some posts from the purview of the office of profit law that was enacted three years ago in the midst of a controversy in the aftermath of the disqualification of Samajwadi Party MP Jaya Bachchan.

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UK to be major global hub for SBI to control Europe ops: Bhatt
- Bank stocks surge on hope of better profits - SBI upbeat on foreign growth, to scale up Singapore ops - Scarce lending by banks hitting tractor sales, complains sector - Unitech Wireless raises Rs 5,000 cr for network roll out - Advance tax collections shore up in Q2 - SAIL"s Bhilai Steel Plant bank account attached
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PM back after attending Copenhagen Summit

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today returned home after attending the UN Summit on Climate Change in Copenhagen where a US-brokered deal with India and other emerging countries that places no legally-binding emission cuts on developed countries ran into trouble. - US, BASIC struck deal; developing nations oppose it - Australian PM says climate talks nearly collapsed - Obama lauds India for setting forth mitigation efforts - Devangshu Datta: Climate of change">Devangshu Datta: Climate of change - Bhutan to remain carbon neutral - HOPEnhagen: $100 bn finance to developing countries Singh delayed his departure by about five hours to hold negotiations with leaders of China, Brazil and South Africa. The Prime Minister had made it clear at the conference that future negotiations on tackling the menace should be based on equitable burden sharing as enshrined in the Kyoto Protocol and Bali mandate. The deal between the US and BASIC (Brazil, South Africa, India and China) bloc is apparently a gain for developed countries which are required under the 1997 Kyoto Protocol to take legally binding emission cuts. The Protocol expires on 2012 and the 194-nation Conference of Parties (COP) of the United Nations has apparently failed to get a word on its extension. Indian negotiators -- Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh and Prime Minister"s Special Envoy on Climate Shyam Saran -- acknowledged that the deal is not done until it is approved by the plenary. However, Ramesh claimed it was "a good deal." But angry delegates of many countries like Tuvalu, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Venezuela and Cuba slammed the US-BASIC deal for showing them great "disrespect" by leaving them out of the drafting process and imposing their document on vast majority.


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