Tag: Cash

  • Hyderabad: Thieves break into house at Shaheennagar, gold & cash stolen

    Hyderabad: Thieves break into house at Shaheennagar, gold & cash stolen

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    Hyderabad: Burglars broke into a house at Shaheennagar and decamped with gold and cash on Tuesday night.

    The house owner, Mohd Ahmed had locked the house and along with family members went to Mahabubnagar to attend a function when the burglars committed the theft.

    The burglars broke the latch of the door and gained entry into the house. After breaking the lock of the cupboards they took away gold articles weighing five tolas and Rs. 40,000 cash, said B Bhaskar, SHO Balapur police station.

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    The police on a complaint from the house owner reached the spot. The clues team visited the house and collected the fingerprints. A case is booked and investigation is on.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Dubai honours 101 taxi drivers for returning cash worth Rs 8 cr, diamonds worth Rs 2 cr

    Dubai honours 101 taxi drivers for returning cash worth Rs 8 cr, diamonds worth Rs 2 cr

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    Abu Dhabi: Dubai’s Roads and Transport (RTA) has recognised 101 drivers for their honesty in handling valuable lost and found items while on duty from January 2022 to March 2023.

    This acknowledgment is in recognition of the prompt action of the drivers in reporting found items to the appropriate authorities, enabling these items to be returned to their owners in record time.

    Items found by the drivers included

    • A black bag containing diamonds valued at 1 million Dirhams (Rs 2,22,60,070)
    • 3.6 Dirhams (Rs 8,01,36,252) million in cash
    • Bag containing gold worth 200,000 Dirhams (Rs 44,52,014)
    • An expensive handbag and a watch valued at 50,000 dollars (Rs 40,87,275)
    • 183,000 Dirhams in cash (Rs 40,73,592)
    • A bag with 200,000 Dirhams (Rs 44,52,014)
    • Watch worth 60,000 dollars (Rs 49,04,730) addition to 221,000 Dirhams (Rs 49,19,475) in cash

    According to Chief Executive Officer of the Roads and Transport Authority, Ahmad Behrozyan, taxi drivers’ reports of lost and found items create joy among residents and are prime examples of honesty, integrity and responsible behaviour.

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    He pointed out that this procedure of reporting and finding lost items shows its internal character and also promotes transportation in Dubai as an attractive option.

    Residents or visitors can report lost items to Dubai Taxi on 800 9090.

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    #Dubai #honours #taxi #drivers #returning #cash #worth #diamonds #worth

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UK convicts couriers who smuggled £104M cash into Dubai in suitcases on flights

    UK convicts couriers who smuggled £104M cash into Dubai in suitcases on flights

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    Abu Dhabi: A network of criminal cash couriers caught smuggling 104 million pounds (Rs 10,69,96,30,697) of suspicious money in suitcases from United Kingdom (UK)

    UK’s National Crime Agency said on Wednesday, April 26, that eleven smugglers had been convicted, along with the ringleader. 

    Four of the business class-flying smugglers were found guilty on Tuesday— 26-year-old  Beatrice Auty from London; 55-year-old Jonathan Johnson,  and 44-year-old Jo Emma Larvin, both from Ripon, North Yorkshire, and Amy Harrison, 27, from Worcester Park in Surrey, – at Isleworth Crown Court.

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    The agency accused the smugglers of participating in 83 separate trips between November 2019 and October 2020, to smuggle bags full of drug money.

    Smuggling method

    The smugglers boarded business-class flights to take advantage of the increased baggage allowance, and check-in as soon as possible before departure. 

    Smugglers have concealed sums of up to 500,000 pounds (Rs 5,14,60,750) by filling them in coffee cans or spraying them with air fresheners to mask the smell from police dogs at airports. 

    The gang members communicated via WhatsApp groups called Sunshine and Lollipops.

    The British police had targeted the routes used to launder money for suspicious activities in London via Dubai, fearing that the money would be difficult to track once it was removed from the country. 

    “The laundering of such vast quantities of cash around the globe enables organised criminals and corrupt elites to clean or hide their ill-gotten gains.”

    “Cash smugglers typically work on behalf of international controller networks, who move the finances of the international drug trade, people traffickers, fraudsters and other criminal groups, making the source of the money difficult to trace.”

    “The criminality this enables costs the UK billions every year, causes misery and ruins lives across the world.”

    “This case demonstrates the continued commitment by the NCA to crackdown on money laundering and close the vulnerabilities being exploited.”

    said Adrian Searle, the NCA’s Director of the National Economic Crime Centre.

    Couriers were paid about 3,000 pounds (Rs 3,08,660) for each trip.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The one big advantage Ron De$antis has: Tons and tons of cash

    The one big advantage Ron De$antis has: Tons and tons of cash

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    trump 64948

    And that’s all without him opening an official campaign committee account.

    DeSantis’ financial advantage looms over the Republican field: Most contenders have cash balances on orders of magnitude lower than his. It far outpaces lower-polling contenders like the pair of South Carolinians, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and Sen. Tim Scott. Even the super PAC backing Trump, MAGA Inc., reported $55 million on hand as of the end of 2022 — a hefty sum, but far short of what’s in the bank for DeSantis. The former president has also raised $18 million through his campaign since launching in November.

    What’s more, DeSantis has the advantage of his platform as governor of Florida. Just this week, he sought to burnish his foreign policy chops on a trip to Japan, South Korea, Israel and the United Kingdom funded by the state’s economic development arm, which relies on both public and private money. The governor’s team said taxpayers did not foot the bill.

    “If DeSantis gets in, he’s going to have a huge amount of momentum and I think the donor class and the [fund]raiser class are going to be with him,” supporter Roy Bailey, a Texas fundraiser who helped lead Trump’s prior presidential fundraising efforts, said in an interview with POLITICO on Wednesday.

    “The people I speak to are either major donors or major raisers. For a time now, it has been very clear to me from my conversations around the country with those people that they are hoping DeSantis gets in the race and I think their money will follow,” Bailey added.

    Bailey declined to detail why he switched allegiances, simply calling DeSantis “what our country needs right now.”

    DeSantis’ state reelection account, Friends of Ron DeSantis, has more than $80 million left over since he won in a landslide last November, including $14 million that came in during the first three months of this year. That money can be transferred into a federal PAC — a move that could invite formal complaints from his opponents.

    Never Back Down, a super PAC formed by former Trump White House official Ken Cuccinelli, has reportedly raised $33 million. (A filing will not be available until July, but a representative for the group — granted anonymity to share details that are not publicly available yet — confirmed reporting of its sum.) And a smattering of smaller groups have formed to support a possible DeSantis candidacy. The Republican Party of Florida, over which DeSantis has significant sway, shifted $3 million to his campaign in February and continues to post impressive fundraising numbers.

    Despite his financial edge, DeSantis has been stymied by Trump in other ways.

    The former president and current Republican frontrunner is snapping up endorsements from Florida Republicans and this week received the backing of former Rep. Lee Zeldin, a New Yorker who had been heaping praise on DeSantis for months. Some supporters and donors have begun to express concern about his strength after he articulated controversial positions on abortion and the war in Ukraine.

    Nevertheless, a tidal wave of money is already crashing on DeSantis’ shore.

    Robert Bigelow, a real estate magnate with a keen interest in the afterlife, has donated $10 million to DeSantis’ gubernatorial account and recently identified himself to TIME Magazine as Never Back Down’s largest donor. Wall Street billionaire Jeff Yass, an early investor in TikTok, contributed $2.6 million to the state campaign in February — three months after DeSantis won reelection.

    Several other big donors followed that pattern, an indication they support DeSantis’ ambitions. Joe Ricketts, former CEO of TD Ameritrade, donated $1 million to the gubernatorial account in February as well.

    Bigelow, Yass and Ricketts did not respond to requests for comment, nor did a spokesperson for DeSantis.

    While money matters, well-funded campaigns have fallen apart in the past.

    Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush serves as one cautionary tale after entering the 2016 Republican primary with $100 million in super PAC funding but not a single primary state win. Former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg spent $1 billion of his own fortune on a White House bid in 2020, only to drop out three months later after failing to secure any victories beyond American Samoa.

    For DeSantis, shifting his political fortune comes with some risk.

    Federal law bars a transfer from his state account to a presidential campaign, and presidential candidates are generally prohibited from raising money through state accounts.

    But moving money into a PAC that supports him is unlikely to trigger legal consequences if DeSantis follows a series of convoluted steps including giving up control of the state account before the transfer happens, according to two election lawyers.

    They said the move raised concerns but pointed to precedent from Florida Rep. Byron Donalds, a Republican who resigned from a state committee that then moved more than $100,000 into a super PAC boosting his Congressional run in 2020. The Federal Election Commission was deadlocked when adjudicating a complaint against Donalds, effectively sanctioning the move.

    “There’s no indication that the FEC would take a different approach and apply the law differently simply because we’re talking about more money,” said Erin Chlopak, senior director for campaign finance at the Campaign Legal Center, which had filed a complaint against the Donalds committee.

    The FEC also moves so slowly that if DeSantis were to elicit a complaint, it likely would not be resolved until after the 2024 election, said Brendan Fischer, a longtime campaign finance lawyer and deputy executive director at the nonprofit Documented.

    Never Back Down has been raising money for a draft account that would funnel funds to an eventual DeSantis campaign, but contributions to that entity would be capped at $3,300 per donor for the primary. The PAC’s representative would not say whether it has shifted any money to the “Draft DeSantis 2024” effort, and would not disclose the number of people who donated to Never Back Down.

    “There is only one Republican who can beat Joe Biden. It’s Ron DeSantis,” Erin Perrine, communications director for Never Back Down, said in a statement. Perrine was referring to polling that shows DeSantis in a stronger position than Trump to defeat Biden despite trailing Trump in most primary matchups. “America needs bold, conservative leadership unafraid to stand up to the woke left, defend families, and never back down from the hard fights our country faces. Ron DeSantis is that leader.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden’s next student loan headache: A cash crunch at the Education Department

    Biden’s next student loan headache: A cash crunch at the Education Department

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    230424 joe biden miguel cardona ap

    The funding woes threaten to exacerbate the political pain of what was always going to be a tricky endeavor for Biden: Sending millions of Americans student loan bills for the first time since their payments were suspended at the start of the pandemic in March 2020.

    Borrowers are set to face longer hold times to speak with their loan servicing company, potentially slower paperwork processing and reduced call center hours.

    “It is a slow-moving car crash,” said Jared Bass, senior director for higher education at the Center for American Progress and a former Democratic appropriations staffer. Bass urged lawmakers to find a way to add money for administering student aid programs even before Congress debates government-wide funding this fall. “We see what’s about to unfold, so let’s just prevent it now and just step in and take preventative measures,” he said.

    Education Secretary Miguel Cardona told House appropriators during a hearing last week that restarting payments will be an “unprecedented” undertaking that requires an “all hands on deck” approach.

    “Never has this ever been done where — depending on the decision of the Supreme Court — up to 43 million borrowers are going to start repaying,” Cardona said. “It’s a huge lift for our team.”

    The Biden administration has said publicly that the moratorium on payments will end this summer, with payments resuming 60 days after either the Supreme Court rules on student debt cancellation or June 30, whichever comes first.

    But the Education Department is also contemplating a transition period that would push repayment well into the fall.

    Department officials have told loan servicers to prepare to resume charging interest on federal loans in September, according to documents obtained by POLITICO under public records requests. Officials are eyeing October as the first month in which any borrower will be required to make a payment, the documents show, noting the requirement that borrowers receive a billing statement at least 21 days in advance of their due date.

    In addition, Education Department officials are planning a “safety net” period in which borrowers aren’t penalized for missing payments once repayment begins, according to three people familiar with the discussions.

    Officials had previously settled on a grace period for the first 90 days after payments are due. But they are now considering extending that flexibility to borrowers for as long as a year after repayment starts, according to two people familiar with internal discussions, who also cautioned that the plans are in flux and could change.

    The administration is looking at a range of other policies designed to make the student loan system more borrower-friendly amid the looming restart of payments. For example, the Education Department last month directed loan servicers to stop collecting on borrower balances that total $100 or less and to write off those debts, according to one of the documents. That is an increase from the previous policy of writing off small balances under $25.

    But the cash-strapped budget for restarting payments remains a major obstacle for the administration.

    In a budget document released last month, the Education Department warned that the current level of funding for its student aid operations “poses significant risks” for implementing a “smooth return to repayment.”

    Already the department has been forced to slash funding to federal loan servicing companies by nearly 10 percent. As part of the cutbacks, Biden administration officials last month allowed the loan companies to curtail their call center operations by 10 hours each week, including eliminating all Saturday hours. Officials also informed the companies they would not be penalized for failing to meet a performance standard in their contract related to long call wait times that caused borrowers to hang up before reaching a customer service representative.

    “The Department is deeply concerned about the lack of adequate annual funding made available to Federal Student Aid this year,” an agency spokesperson said in a statement to POLITICO. “As the Department has repeatedly made clear, restarting repayment requires significant resources to avoid unnecessary harm to borrowers, such as cuts to servicing.”

    “We continue to urge Congress to fully fund President Biden’s FY24 budget request, which would provide critical resources to FSA,” the statement continued. “At the same time, we will continue to work closely with servicers to prioritize providing services to borrowers as quickly and effectively as possible.”

    The administration is deliberating over how to restart student loan payments as conservatives and businesses are ratcheting up pressure to get Biden to end the payment pause, which costs the government roughly $5 billion each month in foregone revenue.

    SoFi, a private student loan company, and the Mackinac Center, a conservative group, have each filed lawsuits to stop the payment pause, arguing that it’s illegal and no longer properly linked to the pandemic emergency.

    On Capitol Hill, Republicans are pushing for a vote in the coming weeks on legislation to overturn Biden’s student debt relief policies, including the pause on payments. Speaker Kevin McCarthy also last week included a repeal of Biden’s student loan policies as part of his opening package of policy concessions that House Republicans want in exchange for raising the debt limit.

    Progressives, meanwhile, are focused on making sure the White House feels the pressure to deliver on student debt cancellation before restarting payments.

    “President Biden has persuasively argued that the only way to responsibly restart loan payments without unleashing an economic catastrophe is to broadly cancel student debt,” said Mike Pierce, executive director of the Student Borrower Protection Center advocacy group. “The president cannot be baited into becoming America’s ‘debt collector-in-chief’ by his opponents. At the end of the day, his name goes on 40 million student loan bills.”

    Beyond the customer service the department has already been forced to reduce, other efforts to ease borrowers back into repayment remain in limbo. That includes extra outreach to populations of borrowers who are particularly at risk of falling behind on payments. And it’s also not clear whether the Education Department will be able to fully implement Biden’s new, more generous repayment program before the payment pause ends.

    The budget challenge stems from Congress’ decision last year to keep funding for the Office of Federal Student Aid flat at about $2 billion, rejecting the administration’s request for a roughly 30 percent increase. Republican appropriators offered to increase Education Department’s administrative funding for student loans, but only if it came with a prohibition on using the money for debt cancellation, according to two people familiar with the negotiations.

    In recent weeks, Education Department officials briefed congressional staff on the funding situation for the remainder of this fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. The agency expects its available funds will be “fully utilized” to support a return to repayment, and the department plans to re-program and shift around some money to boost its loan servicing operations, according to a copy of the plan obtained by POLITICO.

    Democrats plan to press for more funding for the Office of Federal Student Aid in the coming months as Congress hammers out government funding for next year, according to House and Senate aides. The administration said it needs a $620 million increase, about 30 percent, from the current level of funding, though that figure assumes debt cancellation will happen and there will be tens of millions of fewer accounts to manage.

    A group of Senate Democrats, led by Elizabeth Warren, earlier this month warned of “catastrophic consequences for millions of working and middle-class Americans” if the Education Department doesn’t get that funding to help borrowers navigate the restart of payments.

    Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, “will continue to fight for additional resources to FSA to help Pell Grant recipients and student borrowers,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

    Marc Goldwein, senior vice president and senior policy director for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan group that advocates for deficit reduction, said that while he’s sympathetic to the Education Department’s need for funding to properly restart payments the administration has a “credibility gap” on the issue.

    “Fool me once, shame on you; fool me seven times, shame on me,” he said, referring to the Education Department’s many extensions of the payment pause. “There’s no question that they need resources to be able to restart payments and collect the money. The question is: If you give them resources, are they going to use it for that? Or are they going to use it for their various debt cancellation schemes?”

    Goldwein said he supports efforts by the administration to minimize the massive disruption of payments restarting for millions of borrowers, such as pulling borrowers out of default and suspending typical penalties for missed payments.

    “It’s much better to do this well and with a little bit more grace than to do it poorly and save a few dollars,” he said.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Hyderabad: Burglars break into house at Mailardevpally, steal cash, gold

    Hyderabad: Burglars break into house at Mailardevpally, steal cash, gold

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    Hyderabad: Burglars took away cash and gold after breaking into a house at Mailardevpally on Monday night.

    The owner Mazheruddin, was asleep when some unknown person came into the house located at Guntalbaba Dargah and opened the cupboard. He took away gold ornaments weighing three tolas and cash of about Rs 50,000 and escaped.

    The police reached the spot after a complaint on Dial 100. The clues team came and gathered scientific evidence. The police are verifying the footage of closed-circuit cameras.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • BCCI hikes cash prize for domestic tournaments

    BCCI hikes cash prize for domestic tournaments

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    New Delhi: The BCCI on Sunday announced an increase in prize money for the domestic tournaments with the Ranji Trophy winners set to receive a whopping cash reward of Rs 5 crore this year.

    According to the new pay structure, Ranji Trophy winners, who currently get a cheque of Rs 2 crore, will be receiving Rs 5 crore, while the runners-up and losing semifinalists will get Rs 3 crores and Rs 1 crore respectively.

    “I’m pleased to announce an increase in prize money for all @BCCI Domestic Tournaments,” BCCI secretary Jay Shah said in a tweet.

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    “We will continue our efforts to invest in Domestic Cricket which is the backbone of Indian Cricket. Ranji winners to get ?5 crores (from 2 cr), Sr Women winners Rs 50 lacs (from 6 lacs).”

    The cash prize for Irani Cup too has been doubled with the winners getting 50 lakh instead of Rs 25 lakh, and while the team finishing runners-up currently don’t receive any cash reward, they will get 25 lakh from now on.

    In Duleep Trophy, the champions will get Rs 1 crore and runners-up team will be receiving Rs 50 lakh, while winners of Vijay Hazare Trophy will now be getting a cheque of Rs 1 crore and the team finishing second best Rs 50 lakh.

    Deodhar Trophy winners are set to get richer by Rs 40 lakh and the losing finalists will get Rs 20 lakh. Similarly, Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy champions will be receiving a cheque of Rs 80 lakh and the losing team will get 40 lakh.

    In a big boost to women’s cricket in the country, the winners of the Senior Women’s One Day trophy will get a cheque of Rs 50 lakh and the runners-up side will receive Rs 25 lakh.

    The prize money of the senior women’s T20 trophy has also been increased with the winners set to get Rs 40 lakh, eight times more than what they get now. The losing team will get Rs 20 lakh.

    Indian cricket’s 2023-24 domestic season will start with the Duleep Trophy tournament starting on June 28 while the flagship Ranji Trophy will commence from January 5 next year.

    The Duleep Trophy, which will be played among six zonal teams, will be followed by Deodhar Trophy (List A) (July 24 to August 3), Irani Cup (October 1-5), Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Men’s T20 national championships (October 16-November 6) and Vijay Hazare Trophy (November 23-December 15).

    The senior women’s season will begin with the national T20 championships to be played between October 19 to November 9, followed by Inter-Zonal T20 Trophy from November 24 to December 4.

    This will be followed by senior women’s one-day trophy to be played between January 4-26.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Tech consultant arrested in killing of Cash App founder Lee

    Tech consultant arrested in killing of Cash App founder Lee

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    cash app founder slain 55384

    San Francisco Board President Aaron Peskin announced the suspect’s arrest in Emeryville, a San Francisco suburb.

    Police found Lee with stab wounds in the Rincon Hill neighborhood of San Francisco at 2:30 a.m. April 4. He died at a hospital.

    Lee is known for creating the widely used mobile payment service Cash App while working as chief technology officer of the payment company Square, now known as Block. He was the chief product officer for the cryptocurrency firm MobileCoin at the time of his death.

    On his LinkedIn profile, Momeni describes himself as an “IT Consultant/Entrepreneur” as well as “owner” at a company called Expand IT.

    It was not immediately clear whether Momeni has an attorney who can speak on his behalf.

    “I hope today’s arrest can begin a process of healing and closure for all those touched by this tragedy,” Matt Dorsey, another San Francisco supervisor, tweeted Thursday morning.

    Prominent tech leaders took to social media to mourn Lee’s death and blame San Francisco for what they call the city’s lax attitude toward crime. Scott and Jenkins pushed back against that narrative on Thursday, with the prosecutor specifically naming tech billionaire Elon Musk for commenting on the case.

    “This doesn’t have to do with San Francisco, this has to do with human nature,” Scott said.

    Mission Local first reported Momeni’s arrest.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • ED noose tightens around Atiq Ahmad; cash, property papers seized

    ED noose tightens around Atiq Ahmad; cash, property papers seized

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    New Delhi: The Enforcement Directorate (ED) on Thursday said it has conducted raids on the premises of jailed gangster-turned-politician Atiq Ahmad and his associates, following which it seized Rs 75 lakh in cash along with some documents pertaining to nearly 200 bank accounts and 50 shell entities.

    The ED said that cash transactions worth more than Rs 50 crore were also detected during the searches.

    The raids were conducted at 15 locations.

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    According to a source, the raids were conducted at the premises belonging to chartered accountant Sabeeh Ahmed, Asif Jafri, Seetaram Shukla, real estate developers Sanjeev Aggarwal and Deepak Bhargav, advocate-cum-accomplice Saulat Hanif Khan and other aides Khalid Zafar, Asad, Vadood Ahmed, Kali and Mohsin.

    “Atiq Ahmad and his aides were laundering the extortion money and the money which they collected through illegal activities. The documents seized during the raids confirm this. We seized papers of around 100 properties which are in the name of Atiq Ahmad’s close aides and other shell firms being run by them. These properties are suspected to be Atiq’s benami properties,” the ED said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Happening Hyderabad’: Create a reel to win cash prizes of up to Rs 1L

    ‘Happening Hyderabad’: Create a reel to win cash prizes of up to Rs 1L

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    Hyderabad: In an exciting competition presented by the Digital Media Wing of Telangana, a contest named ‘Happening Hyderabad,’ allows participants to showcase the charm and liveliness of the city by capturing glimpses of developmental works and making a reel video out of it.

    Participants have to create reels that capture the essence of #HappeningHyderabad and tag @DigitalMediaTS in their posts.

    On winning the contest, participants stand a chance to win cash prizes of up to Rs 1,00,000. The entries for enrolling oneself in the competition will be accepted until April 30.

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    To get more information on the contest, visit the official website of Telangana Digital Media Wing.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )