Tag: Ahead

  • Ahead Of G-20 Event, 100 Delegates From 30 Countries To Attend Y-20 Summit In Ladakh

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    SRINAGAR: More than 100 Y-20 delegates from over 30 countries arrived in the Union Territory of Ladakh on Tuesday while as the J&K administration said that it has made elaborate arrangements to make the G-20 meeting schedules in Srinagar a grand success.

    Addressing media persons, the administration has said that till Tuesday, over 100 Y20 delegates from over 30 countries have arrived in Ladakh while a few more are expected to arrive by Wednesday morning.

    The officials said that as G20 is being conducted under India’s presidency under the theme of One World One family one future, they have put forward priorities of youth as they (youth) are very much concerned about their future.

    “The administration since the last three months has been preparing for the event and overseeing how we can make this programme a grand success,” they said, adding that in this regard, various activities have been held so far.

    Pertinently, Ladakh is hosting a three-day youth 20 pre-summit under the aegis of the G-20.

    The delegates were welcomed by the senior officers of the UT administration. During the three-day summit, there will be discussions and deliberations on different important topics, reports said.

    On the first day of the summit, the delegates will visit local places of importance including Hemis and Thicksey monasteries and Shanti Stupa. On the following day, LG Ladakh Dr. B. D. Mishra will address the delegates at the Sindu Sanskriti Auditorium.

    On the third day of the pre-summit, Union Minister Anurag Thakur will interact with the delegates and also participate in a youth dialogue. As per the UT administration officials, sufficient security measures and other arrangements are in place for the smooth conduct of the program.

    The Y20 pre-summit in Ladakh will be a valuable opportunity for the global youth to reflect on priority areas in consultation with G-20 member states to come up with policy recommendations that will prove beneficial to the Ladakh region.

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    #Ahead #G20 #Event #Delegates #Countries #Attend #Y20 #Summit #Ladakh

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Ahead of G-20 event in Sgr, over 100 delegates from 30 countries arrive in Ladakh for 3-day Y-20 summit

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    Srinagar, Apr 25: More than 100 Y-20 delegates from over 30 countries have arrived in the Union Territory of Ladakh on Tuesday while as the J&K administration said that it has made elaborate arrangements to make the G-20 meeting scheduoes in Srinagar a grand success.

    Addressing media persons, the administration has said that till Tuesday, over 100 Y20 delegates from over 30 countries have arrived in Ladakh while a few more are expected to arrive by tomorrow morning.

    According to the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), the officials said that as G20 is being conducted under India’s presidency under the theme of One World One family one future, they have put forward priorities of youth as they (youth) are very much concerned about their future.

    “The administration since the last three months have been preparing for the event and overseeing how we can make this programme a grand success,” they said, adding that in this regard, various activities have been held so far.

    Pertinently, Ladakh is hosting a three-day youth 20 pre-summit under the aegis of the G-20.

    The delegates were welcomed by the senior officers of the UT administration. During the three-day summit, there will be discussions and deliberations on different important topics, reports said.

    On the first day of the summit, the delegates will visit local places of importance including Hemis and Thicksey monasteries and Shanti Stupa. On the following day, LG Ladakh Dr. B. D. Mishra will address the delegates at the Sindu Sanskriti Auditorium.

    On the third day of the pre-summit, Union Minister Anurag Thakur will interact with the delegates and also participate in a youth dialogue. As per the UT administration officials, sufficient security measures and other arrangements are in place for the smooth conduct of the program.

    The Y20 pre-summit in Ladakh will be a valuable opportunity for the global youth to reflect on priority areas in consultation with G-20 member states to come up with policy recommendations that will prove beneficial to the Ladakh region—(KNO)

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    #Ahead #G20 #event #Sgr #delegates #countries #arrive #Ladakh #3day #Y20 #summit

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Caste Census demon haunts Maha BJP ahead of 2024 Lok Sabha polls

    Caste Census demon haunts Maha BJP ahead of 2024 Lok Sabha polls

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    Mumbai: The clamour for a caste-based Census has once again come to haunt the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led government at the Centre, which is treating the sensitive issue with kid-gloves, with the general elections barely a year away.

    The Imperial Census, first conducted by the British Government in 1871-72 for the entire population, and later periodically undertaken, has always included general questions based on caste-religions.

    However, the first loose Socio-Economic Caste Census (SECC) was taken up by the British in 1881 — over 140 years ago, followed by a similar one in 1931.

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    In 2011, India had conducted a SECC but mostly to ascertain the number of people living below poverty line (BPL) and design targeted welfare measures or schemes for that group.

    Maharashtra Congress President Nana Patole raised the issue of a Caste-based Census in Dec. 2021, and soon the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and Shiv Sena (UBT) also joined the chorus.

    “The decision for a Caste Census was taken unanimously (by Maha Vikas Aghadi), but after that the new government is reluctant to take it up,” said Patole recently.

    Congress Chief Spokesperson Atul Londhe said that the state government has brought the proposal to a standstill “with nothing moving ahead now”, and demanded that it should be immediately revived.

    NCP President Sharad Pawar has made a strong plea for Caste Census owing to “strong sentiments linking it with social justice”, to create targeted development plans for various caste groups and help achieve an all-inclusive overall national growth.

    Party’s Chief Spokesperson Mahesh Tapase said that the government’s reluctance is confusing as with passing time, increasing population and aspirations, even welfare measures and policies need to be modified to suit the current situation.

    According to Shiv Sena (UBT) National Spokesperson Kishore Tiwari, the BJP government is worried about a Caste Census ahead of the 2024 elections as it would “reveal a lot and expose them”.

    “There are a lot of caste imbalances, those who are less in number are enjoying the maximum fruits of developments, while the huge majority of the deprived at the lower levels of society in all castes-communities, continue to be ignored and their economic status keeps degrading,” said Tiwari.

    Tapase feels that a Caste Census will throw up exhaustive, scientific data that can enable policy-makers to formulate special policies, reservations and implementation for each equitable representation to each caste or community, depending on their actual needs.

    Presently India is largely relying on the data thrown up in the 1931 Caste Census, but the socio-economic situation has undergone a sea-change in the past 90 years compelling the need to ‘refresh’ the figures and caste components in the 21st century.

    Replying to the demands, Deputy Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis last month stated that the government will send a team to study the Bihar pattern where a caste-census is being carried out.

    Admitting that there is a near-consensus on a Caste-based Census in the state, Fadnavis also cautioned for care as such an exercise could potentially create caste conflicts, and hence the need to analyse the Bihar experience on this count before taking a final decision here.

    Urging for a well-researched scientific approach, Fadnavis referred to the 2011 SECC and claimed that the data was not made public owing to several issues, errors and discrepancies, and adopting such wrong statistics could lead to a fresh social crisis as all communities would object.

    Stressing the need for a proper Caste Census, Janata Dal (U) MLC Kapil Patil said it would help determine not only the OBC population in the state but also provide data of all communities in Maharashtra.

    Tapase said that when the latest authentic data is available, the government can ensure that welfare schemes reach the intended sections and remove the existing glaring socio-economic disparities.

    Incidentally, Maharashtra announced in the Budget 2023-2024 that it will set up caste-wise development corporations for Lingayat, Gurav, Vadar and Ramoshi communities in the state, further spurring the demand for a Caste Census.

    A couple of years ago the Maharashtra State Commission for Backward Classes (MSCBC) had given the finishing touches to the empirical data collection format and norms for a proposed SECC, estimated to cost around Rs 435-crore, but as state Opposition leaders rue, nothing has moved ahead.

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    #Caste #Census #demon #haunts #Maha #BJP #ahead #Lok #Sabha #polls

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad: Traffic advisory issued ahead of Shah’s visit

    Hyderabad: Traffic advisory issued ahead of Shah’s visit

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    Hyderabad: In view of Union Home Minister of India Amit Shah’s public meeting at KVR Ground, Chevella on Sunday the traffic police announced traffic restrictions between 2 pm to 8 pm.

    Traffic diversion in the limits of Narsingi traffic police station:

    Heavy vehicles coming from Hyderabad towards Chevella and Vikarabad will be diverted at Tippukan bridge towards Narsingi – Shankarapally – Parveda X Road – Aloor – Vikarabad.

    Traffic coming from Hyderabad towards Moinabad, Chevella, Vikarabad will be diverted at Rotary-1 TSPA towards service road – Narsingi – Janwada – Shankarpally – Parveda X road – Vikarabad.

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    Traffic coming from Shamshabad, Rajendranagar on ORR Exit No:18 towards Vikarabad will be diverted to Exit No:1 service Road – Movie Tower new road -CBIT T junction – Shankarpally – Parveda X Road – Aloor – Vikarabad.

    Heavy vehicles coming from Shamshabad, Rajendranagar on ORR Exit No:18 towards Chevella will be diverted to Exit No:1 service Road – Movie Tower new road – CBIT T junction – Shankarpally – Yenkeapally X Road – Chevella.

    Traffic Diversion in the limits of Rajendranagar traffic police station:

    Traffic coming from TSPA towards Chevella and Vikarabad will be diverted towards Himayathnagar X Road – Pragathi Resorts – Yenkepally X Road – Aloor X road – Vikarabad.

    Traffic coming from TSPA towards Chevella and Vikarabad will be diverted towards Himayathnagar X Road – Pragathi Resorts – Yenkepally X Road – Chevella.

    Traffic coming from TSPA towards Moinabad,Chevella, Vikarabad will be diverted towards Himayathnagar X Road – Pragathi Resorts – Yenkepally X Road-Shankarapally.

    Traffic diversion in the limits of Chevella traffic police station:

    Traffic coming from Vikarabad to Moinabad and Hyderabad will be diverted at Aloor X Road towards Aloor – Parveda X Road – Shankarpally – Narsingi – Hyderabad.

    Traffic coming from Vikarabad to Shabad, Shadnagar will be diverted at Bastepur X Road towards Pamena – Pamena X Road – Nagarguda X road – Shabad.

    Traffic coming from Shabad towards Vikarabad will be diverted at Pamena X Road towards Pamena – Bastepur – NH 163 – Vikarabad.

    Traffic coming from Moinabad towards Vikarabad will be diverted at Shabad X Road – Pamena X Road towards Pamena – Bastepur – NH 163 – Vikarabad.

    Commuters are requested to follow the above advisory and ensure a smooth flow of traffic, the advisory stated.

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    #Hyderabad #Traffic #advisory #issued #ahead #Shahs #visit

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Karnataka: PM Modi to address rally on April 30, ahead of polls

    Karnataka: PM Modi to address rally on April 30, ahead of polls

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    Bengaluru: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address a massive public rally on April 30 at Channapatna in Karnataka’s Ramnagar district ahead of the Assembly elections scheduled to be held in the southern state on May 10, a BJP leader said on Saturday.

    A party leader said that the BJP is aiming at winning more seats in certain parts of the state where it does not enjoy a significant stronghold.

    Former Karnataka chief minister and Janata Dal-Secular leader H.D. Kumaraswamy is contesting from the Channapatna constituency. The BJP has fielded former minister C.P. Yogeshwar from this seat. Political analysts believe the constituency would witness a direct contest between the JD-S and the BJP.

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    Kumaraswamy’s son Nikhil Kumaraswamy is contesting from the neighbouring Ramnagar constituency. The region is considered as a bastion of the JD-S.

    The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has planned a mega rally in Channapatna.

    Preparations are currently underway at Shettihalli village.

    According to sources, a huge stage and shelter is being erected to accommodate 2-3 lakh people. The BJP workers will be roped in from the neighbouring districts of Tumakuru, Mandya and Mysuru.

    Yogeshwar on Saturday said there would be no road show this time in Channapatna. “The programme is scheduled to take place for about 2 hours. The party wants to win more seats in the old Mysuru region (south Karnataka),” he said.

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    #Karnataka #Modi #address #rally #April #ahead #polls

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sufi body calls Poonch attack ‘conspiracy to defame India’ ahead of G20 meet

    Sufi body calls Poonch attack ‘conspiracy to defame India’ ahead of G20 meet

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    Jaipur: All India Sufi Sajjadanashin Council chairman Hazrat Syed Naseeruddin Chishti on Saturday condemned the Poonch terrorist attack and said the entire country is with the armed forces.

    Such attacks are part of a “conspiracy to defame India” because a G20 meeting is scheduled to take place in Kashmir, he said.

    Five Army personnel were killed and another was seriously injured on Thursday after their vehicle was attacked by unidentified terrorists and caught fire in Jammu and Kashmir’s Poonch. The soldiers were from a Rashtriya Rifles unit deployed for counter-terror operations.

    MS Education Academy

    Banned outfit People’s Anti-Fascist Front (PAFF), a proxy wing of terror group Jaish-e-Mohammed, has claimed responsibility for the attack. There are reports suggesting that it was the handiwork of banned Lashker-e-Taiba group also.

    “Till date, all our brave soldiers have sacrificed their lives for the protection of Kashmir and peace in Kashmir. We will not let their martyrdom go in vain, the whole country is standing with the armed forces,” Chishti said in a statement.

    Today, Kashmir has started on the path of peace and development. The Muslims there are also extending their full cooperation in establishing peace, he said.

    Such nefarious terrorist attacks are part of a “conspiracy to defame India” because a G20 programme is scheduled to be held in Kashmir, he added.

    India is expected to host over 200 G20 meetings during its yearlong presidency of the influential group. It will host a meeting of the G20 Tourism Working Group in Srinagar in May.

    Chishti also greeted people on the occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr.

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    #Sufi #body #calls #Poonch #attack #conspiracy #defame #India #ahead #G20 #meet

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • McCarthy builds a kitchen Cabinet ahead of debt showdown — without his No. 2, Scalise

    McCarthy builds a kitchen Cabinet ahead of debt showdown — without his No. 2, Scalise

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    Most House Republicans insist publicly that they’re paying no attention to the simmering mistrust between McCarthy and Scalise. But privately, many are watching the duo’s dynamic strain under the stress of the debt-limit fight. That’s true even as McCarthy mends fences with the budget chief he’d previously sidelined, Scalise ally Rep. Jodey Arrington (R-Texas).

    GOP lawmakers and senior aides say McCarthy and Scalise are friendly in private, and that Scalise is happy at No. 2, where he’s focused on policy priorities like energy and education. Yet it’s no secret that Scalise, once seen as waiting in the wings if McCarthy stumbled, is now competing for the speaker’s ear with other confidants on several issues.

    The resulting tension is starting to simmer just as McCarthy, like his predecessors John Boehner and Paul Ryan, faces the ultimate test of House Republican loyalty — a debt standoff. And it shows that the rift that opened between McCarthy and some senior Republicans during his grueling bid for the job hasn’t faded in the months since.

    “People say there’s goldfish memory: 30 seconds, and everything’s forgotten,” said Rep. Dan Bishop (R-N.C.), one of the 20 conservative holdouts who delayed McCarthy’s ascension to speaker. “But I’m not sure that’s always true.”

    It’s not uncommon for legislative leaders to lean on an unofficial circle of friendly colleagues. But any sign of daylight within McCarthy’s leadership team was bound to draw scrutiny after what he endured to secure the speakership — and his narrow margin for error to keep it.

    McCarthy’s relationship with Scalise isn’t the only one taxed by the debt drama. As he moved closer to releasing a bill designed to unite his members, the speaker put distance between himself and Arrington. Allies of McCarthy had seen Arrington as speaking out of turn about the conference’s approach to the high-stakes debt-limit talks.

    But since then, McCarthy has quietly worked to repair ties with Arrington — even putting the Budget Committee chair’s name on the GOP’s opening bid in the debt talks — in what members saw as an effort to show unity to the rank and file.

    Arrington said in an interview that McCarthy called him hours before releasing the House GOP’s debt plan and asked if he would add his name as lead sponsor.

    “I said, ‘If I can help the conference succeed in this endeavor, which I think is critical for our country’s future, I’m in’,” the Texan recalled.

    Still, some members are keeping a close eye on McCarthy and Scalise as the House hurtles toward a likely vote next week on the speaker’s debt plan. The two meet one-on-one at least weekly, but suspicion about a rift between them flared again heading into January’s speakership race, as McCarthy worked fiercely to win over his skeptics, while behind closed doors his allies fumed that Scalise wasn’t boosting him enough.

    “Steve could have said the simple thing in the press and refused to do so,” one House Republican allied with McCarthy said, insisting on anonymity to speak freely about Scalise’s handling of the speakership fight. “I think there’s a level of distrust between the two members that exists, sure. But the staffs are working well together and that’s all it really needs for this [debt ceiling] thing.”

    Scalise made several public statements supporting McCarthy for speaker in the runup to the balloting and nominated the Californian on the floor. And Scalise allies are defending his efforts on steering other high-profile GOP measures to passage in recent weeks, including a marquee energy bill and a “parents’ bill of rights.”

    Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.), a member of the elected leadership team, said Scalise was instrumental in smoothing over hiccups on the parents’ bill as language in the text threatened to trigger a damaging jailbreak: “It went from a dead bill to something we were able to fix in 30 to 45 minutes.”

    In the first months of the new majority, however, McCarthy became increasingly reliant on his own sounding boards, like McHenry, Hill, Graves and others. They serve as McCarthy’s shadow Cabinet of sorts, offering perhaps the most precious commodity in Washington: loyalty.

    Graves and McHenry, in particular, seem to be involved in most of the GOP’s tactical decisions these days. Graves is running point on McCarthy’s debt conversations across the conference, after helping to shepherd a major energy bill and internal talks about earmark rules. McHenry has been pulled in on multiple issues that range beyond his financial expertise.

    Their fellow House Republicans note that McCarthy’s unelected lieutenants, in addition to being viewed as strong on policy, are also not as threatening as Scalise because they’re not seen as angling for his job.

    “It’s natural for folks to fall back with people they trust, and people who aren’t afraid to tell them ‘that’s a bad idea,’” Rep. Dave Joyce (R-Ohio) said.

    It’s a practice that past speakers have also engaged in, as former Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.) pointed out.

    “Having close friends be trusted advisers outside of elected leadership is not uncommon,” said Davis, a close McCarthy ally. “Boehner had members like Tom Latham and Dave Joyce, among others. Paul Ryan had Jim Sensenbrenner and Sean Duffy, too. Kevin is doing the same thing with trusted folks that were essential in helping him win the speaker’s gavel.”

    But that practice has a way of chafing the members left on the outskirts of the conversation — such as those elected to leadership or committee chair positions. In Scalise’s case, he took pains to project alignment with McCarthy in the run-up to November’s midterms that became harder to maintain after the House GOP’s hopes of a commanding victory faded to a narrow, four-seat majority.

    That small margin of control, of course, made it much harder for McCarthy to win the speakership earlier this year. Throughout the 15 ballots he needed to win, McCarthy allies argue Scalise should’ve had more of a hands-on approach, rather than a hands off, which triggered old suspicions that the Louisianan was lying in wait for his opening to rise, feelings of which have percolated throughout the duo’s first 100 days in charge of the House.

    Allies in both camps note that the majority leader is keeping his head down and focused on policy — including putting out fires in another fraught intraparty debate: immigration policy. The Louisianan has helped broker conversations between holdouts like Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) and his Lone Star State rival, GOP Rep. Chip Roy. But a New York Times report earlier this month that highlighted his frayed relationship with McCarthy only made things worse.

    “It was a little weird. I don’t think that was one of the best moments, but there have been many good moments,” Bishop acknowledged.

    Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), a purple-district incumbent and McCarthy ally, said he called the speaker’s office to raise concerns about the “undermining” that he perceived in the Times report. Bacon added that he’s “seen no evidence” of bad blood between the “very collegial” speaker and majority leader.

    In a potential win for McCarthy, some of his biggest skeptics during the speakership skirmish appear to be tuning out what’s happening at the top. About a half-dozen members of the House Freedom Caucus interviewed for this story largely shrugged off the leadership drama as separate from their world — though some were displeased and defensive about the sidelining of Arrington, a fellow conservative albeit not a member of the group.

    The Freedom Caucus’ bigger focus right now is eking all the wins they can get from the debt deal, which leadership needs the right flank on board for as much as possible.

    Arrington, for his part, appears back in the fray on the debt talks. He attended a closed-door meeting Thursday afternoon as a cross-section of the conference demanded changes to the leadership-crafted measure’s proposed Medicaid work requirements, while shrugging off any questions about discord.

    Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.), one of the conference’s more respected senior members, observed that Boehner once likened the speakership, during tough internal battles to corralling “jumping frogs in the wheelbarrow.”

    “Keeping all the jumping frogs together, at some snapshot in time when we’re voting, is going to be the test of leadership,” Womack said.

    Jennifer Scholtes, Jordain Carney and Caitlin Emma contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Jan. 6 defendant fired on deputies ahead of expected arrest, court records show

    Jan. 6 defendant fired on deputies ahead of expected arrest, court records show

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    Now, Pelham is facing a felony charge that could result in years of jail time for allegedly firing a 9mm pistol in the direction of deputies.

    The sheriff’s deputies indicated that when they arrived at his house, Pelham sent his young daughter outside before he began firing gunshots.

    “After putting the child in the patrol car, Deputy J.W. heard gunshots coming from inside the residence,” according to the newly revealed charging documents. “Deputy J.W. reported that the gunshots were spread out in time and that they were not towards the HCSO personnel. Deputy J.W. moved his patrol car away from the front of the residence for additional safety.”

    The deputy who first said he shielded Pelham’s daughter arrived at about 8:40 p.m. An hour later, according to the filings, Pelham’s father arrived on the scene and another shot was fired.

    “[T]he bullet from this gunshot came in so close proximity to myself that I could hear the distinct whistling sound as the bullet traveled by me and then strike a metal object to my right side,” one of the deputies, identified only as J.W., reported.

    An FBI agent arrived on the scene at about 10:40 p.m. to help put Pelham under arrest. He said he heard another six to seven gunshots fired.

    The court documents indicate that Pelham has a 2003 Texas felony conviction, which barred him from being in possession of a firearm.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • U.S. positioning troops ahead of possible Sudan embassy evacuation

    U.S. positioning troops ahead of possible Sudan embassy evacuation

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    A Defense Department spokesperson confirmed that the U.S. was prepositioning troops, but stopped short of saying they were heading to Djibouti.

    “The Department of Defense, through U.S. Africa Command, is monitoring the situation in Sudan and conducting prudent planning for various contingencies. As part of this, we are deploying additional capabilities nearby in the region for contingency purposes related to securing and potentially facilitating the departure of U.S. Embassy personnel from Sudan, if circumstances require it,” said DoD spokesperson Lt. Col. Garron Garn.

    Some in the administration are hoping to avoid scenes reminiscent of the evacuation from Kabul, Afghanistan, in 2021. The crush of thousands pleading to leave the city as the Taliban took control became a defining image of America’s withdrawal.

    Lawmakers, meanwhile, are worried about the safety of U.S. staffers in Khartoum.

    Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said worried senators took a detour to a Capitol briefing Thursday on the document leaks to ask about the safety of U.S. personnel in Khartoum. Declining to provide specifics because of the classified setting, Kaine said there was a plan in place to take care of them.

    “Arrangements have been made. They’re sheltering in place and currently all secure, all accounted for and in communication with them,” he said. “There’s a whole-of-government effort to figure out exactly how to make sure that they continue in safety. We’re very much on top of it.”

    Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), also on the committee, added “I, of course, have concerns about our personnel there.” He declined to discuss specific plans.

    A military evacuation seems more likely by the hour.

    The airport, located in central Khartoum, is closed but would be inoperable even if it reopened due to damage from bombardment and fighting. The roughly 70 U.S. staff at the embassy have no options to leave Sudan on their own without immense risk to their safety. For the most part, U.S. diplomats in Sudan are unaccompanied, meaning they do not have their family with them at what’s considered a challenging post, a State Department official said.

    The American mission in the capital warned Thursday that “due to the uncertain security situation in Khartoum and closure of the airport, it is not currently safe to undertake a U.S. government-coordinated evacuation of private U.S. citizens.”

    Also on Wednesday, Molly Phee, the top State Department official for African affairs, told congressional staffers that it was too late to order a departure of the mission because of the deteriorating security situation that has already led to around 300 deaths and about 3,000 more wounded, two congressional aides said.

    Another U.S. official familiar with the planning said papers had been drawn up at the State Department for an evacuation order. The official added that State Department leadership held a call with embassy staff Thursday morning to discuss options, including a ground evacuation. But the assessment, per the official, was that travel by road was currently more dangerous than by air.

    A potential option would be to move the personnel to Wadi Seidna Air Base for an air evacuation. Dozens of Egyptian soldiers captured by the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group were released this week and flew home from that base, which is 14 miles north of Khartoum.

    The United States was also in touch with other countries with embassies in the Sudanese capital about evacuation plans, a different U.S. official said.

    The State Department didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The Biden administration has faced similar situations multiple times since the chaotic Kabul evacuation.

    As the situation deteriorated in Ethiopia amid a major conflict, the State Department urged Americans to leave the country while preparing U.S. forces and diplomats for a potential full embassy closure that ultimately did not have to happen. (A partial drawdown of non-emergency embassy personnel was ordered.)

    The administration shut down the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv in the days before Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Within months it had reopened the embassy, though not at full staffing.

    The Biden administration in both cases said it would not stage another Kabul-style evacuation that involved people beyond U.S. government employees. To that end, it sent out warnings for weeks and months telling Americans to leave Ethiopia and Ukraine.

    The political situation in Sudan has been volatile for years, and the State Department has long urged Americans not to travel there. The last time a similar fight broke out in the region between two top leaders, 400,000 people died — and that was in South Sudan.

    Nahal Toosi and Joe Gould contributed to this report.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Teachers union chief hires seasoned lawyer ahead of Hill testimony

    Teachers union chief hires seasoned lawyer ahead of Hill testimony

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    She’s turned to Michael Bromwich, senior counsel at the white shoe Steptoe law firm, for help.

    “It is undeniable that the pandemic resulted in tragic and continuing consequences for children,” Bromwich wrote on the union’s behalf Wednesday to subcommittee chair Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio) and ranking member Raul Ruiz (D-Calif.).

    “We make no progress towards addressing those very real problems by engaging in the type of scapegoating built on false allegations that appear to be the basis for this Subcommittee’s ‘investigation,’” Bromwich wrote in his letter to lawmakers, which was obtained by POLITICO.

    Bromwich is widely known in Washington for his work representing former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe during the Trump-Russia investigation and Christine Blasey Ford, the California professor who alleged she was sexually assaulted by Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

    A former Justice Department inspector general, Bromwich has garnered a reputation as a pugnacious defender. His message to congressional Republicans on Wednesday suggests he will deploy a similar strategy.

    Earlier this month, Wenstrup asked Weingarten to testify at an April 26 hearing on the consequences of Covid-19’s school closures.

    That request followed a March 28 letter from Wenstrup to Weingarten, which informed the teachers’ union chief that the select committee was investigating “potential political interference” with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance on reopening schools issued in February 2021.

    Wenstrup’s March 28 letter alleged the union was granted “uncommon” access to edit the guidance before its release, citing media reports at the time, which it said ultimately resulted in the CDC advising that schools should remain closed in much of the country.

    Bromwich countered that the union shared its views on the planned guidance in late January 2021 during a conference call between Weingarten, senior union staff, CDC officials and President Joe Biden’s office.

    AFT officials then followed up in February 2021 to suggest language related to accommodations for high-risk educators and staff, and also proposed that the CDC include language that said its guidance may need to be updated in light of new virus variants.

    In addition, the union also proposed a “trigger” threshold that would determine when schools should be closed based on positive test cases. But the CDC rejected that suggestion, according to Bromwich.

    “The claim that the AFT’s agenda was ‘keeping schools closed,’ and that it shifted CDC’s guidance to match that agenda, is utterly false,” Bromwich wrote to lawmakers on Wednesday.

    “In fact, the AFT’s role was extremely limited,” he wrote. “It proposed changes that amounted to a few sentences in a 38-page document. The need to clarify these points was obvious and should have been uncontroversial.”

    Wenstrup has asked Weingarten to supply documents, communications and a list of meetings between the AFT and the CDC, department of Health and Human Services and the Executive Office of the President regarding the guidance, among other items.

    Wenstrup also issued similar requests to more than a dozen other organizations — including the National Education Association, AASA, The School Superintendents Association; the National Association of Secondary School Principals the National Association of Elementary School Principals and National School Boards Association.

    Weingarten “welcomes the opportunity to testify and cooperate with the committee’s work,” an AFT spokesperson said on Wednesday.

    A spokesperson for Wenstrup did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )