Tag: chief

  • Judges Are Like Architectural Designers While Deciding A Case: Chief Justice

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    SRINAGAR: The Jammu and Kashmir Judicial Academy organized a one-day interactive program on “order/judgment writing, application of the law, sharing best practices, and finding solutions to practical problems faced by them in justice delivery” for Civil Judges (Junior Division) of Kashmir Province. The program was inaugurated by Chief Justice, High Court of J&K and Ladakh, and Patron-in-Chief, J&K Judicial Academy, Justice N Kotiswar Singh. The program aims to provide a platform for Civil Judges to exchange ideas and share experiences as well as learn techniques from experts in the field of law.

    Yash Paul Bourney, Registrar Vigilance, High Court of J&K and Ladakh, M K Sharma, Director, J&K Judicial Academy, and Jatinder Singh Jamwal, Special Judge, Anti-Corruption (CBI Cases), Srinagar, were the resource persons for the program.

    Delivering the inaugural address, the Chief Justice stated that it is the primary duty of a Judge to write a judgment understandable by a litigant and not for the higher courts. All focus must be on the litigant who has come for justice, he said, adding that judgment should be clear, lucid, and with good reasoning. He said the application of mind is important to make any decision because we are dealing with human sufferings. For a good judgment, the facts of the case should be properly marshaled, and the law should be applied with clear reasons for accepting or rejecting any claim of the litigant, he asserted.

    The Chief Justice emphasized that judges are like architectural designers while deciding a case. Though in criminal cases, the charge-sheet is the basis for decision, the facts of the case must be taken care of while deciding the case, he added.

    Justice Sindhu Sharma, Chairperson, J&K Judicial Academy, in her special address, while quoting a Greek Philosopher, said that the qualities of a judge are to hear courteously, to answer wisely, to consider soberly, and to decide impartially. She emphasized that while deciding a case and writing a judgment, a judge must consider the arguments and claims put forth by the parties. Further quoting Justice H.K. Sema, a former judge of the Supreme Court of India, she said that the judgment is best when given with reasons. While quoting Justice R.C. Lahoti, former Chief Justice of India, she said that while writing a judgment, don’t go into the verbosity of the document.

    She also deliberated that a litigant must understand why a case is in his favor or against, that should come out from the judgment. The basic factors that should be considered are to maintain integrity while passing a decision, and it should not be influenced by any other matter, including our own prejudices and biases. We have to consider the facts while writing a judgment, that it should be based on the provision of law, the aspect on which we are doing, and how we are going to write the judgment.

    Justice Javed Iqbal Wani, Member, J&K Judicial Academy, in his special address, citing the case of Barender Kumar Gosh, said that the trial Judge quoted from the sonnet ‘On His Blindness’ of a famous English poet John Milton, i.e., “They also serve who only stand and wait,” while turning the plea of innocence of Barender Kumar Gosh in a robbery and murder case, quoting that even if you were a guard at the door, you were still guilty of the crime for taking no action.

    Justice Wani, citing another recent judgement of the Supreme Court of India, said, while quoting Justice Roslyn Atkinson, a former judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland, that there are various purposes for any judgement that is written, such as spelling out the judge’s own thoughts, explaining the decision to the parties, communicating the reasons for the decision to the public, and providing reasons for an appeal to consider. He added that every judgement has to have various basic elements, such as a statement of material (relevant) facts, legal issues or questions, deliberation to reach a decision, and the ratio or conclusive decision.

    Director of J&K Judicial Academy, M.K. Sharma, in his welcome address, underscored the importance of organizing this program. He said that writing judgments and orders is virtually an art and often varies from judge to judge as no form or format has been provided in law as to how judgments and orders should be written by the judges.

    The day-long interactive program was divided into two technical sessions and an interactive session for feedback.

    The first technical session was chaired by Yash Paul Bourney, Registrar Vigilance, and M.K. Sharma, Director of J&K Judicial Academy, who analyzed the art of order/judgment writing and application of the law.

    The second technical session was chaired by Jatinder Singh Jamwal, Special Judge, Anti-Corruption (CBI Cases), who shared best practices and finding solutions to practical problems faced by Civil Judges (Junior Division) in justice delivery.

    The interactive program concluded with a session during which the participants deliberated and discussed various aspects of the subject topic and raised queries that were satisfactorily settled by the resource persons. (KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • U.K. treasury chief urges U.S.-Europe unity after France calls for break

    U.K. treasury chief urges U.S.-Europe unity after France calls for break

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    He signaled that the U.K. isn’t interested in breaking with the U.S. on geopolitics — days after French President Emmanuel Macron called for Europe to bolster its autonomy from Washington. He also said he doesn’t plan to get into a subsidy war with the U.S. in response to President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, which is rattling Europe with incentives for green energy companies to operate in the States. He also defended the U.K.‘s decision to waive a core banking regulation to let HSBC acquire the U.K. business of Silicon Valley Bank after the California-based lender failed last month.

    On divergent global economic forecasts, with the IMF seeing “anemic” growth and U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen pushing an outlook that’s “reasonably bright.”

    We are in a much stronger position than we thought we would be in the autumn. And I would say that I’m not the only finance minister who is a bit more optimistic than the IMF.

    It’s a cautious optimism. That’s probably the mood I would describe it as. I think people have seen banking turbulence in Switzerland and California. There’s obviously high inflation … and that’s a destabilizing factor.

    So I think there is caution alongside the optimism, but I think that most people think that this is a set of challenges that the world economy can weather.

    On whether Britain set a bad precedent by waiving rules designed to separate retail and investment banking when it permitted HSBC to buy the U.K. operations of Silicon Valley Bank.

    In any situation like the one that the United States authorities faced with the parent branch [of SVB] or Swiss authorities faced with Credit Suisse, you have to show some flexibility at the margins without compromising core principles.

    And in this case, the ring-fencing waiver was actually a very, very small thing in the grander scheme of the ring-fencing protections that we have in the U.K.

    We’re not going to do anything to unlearn the lessons of 2008.

    On the stability of the U.K. banking industry, after rising interest rates triggered the downfall of SVB.

    Are there lessons that we can learn from seeing the speed at which that issue happened? Of course there are.

    But do I think the U.K. banking system can withstand a period of higher interest rates? Yes, I think it can.

    On whether he agrees with former U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss that Britain should take a harder line with China and the suggestion that Macron was weak for visiting Beijing to help resolve the Ukraine conflict.

    We are all talking in the finance minister world about making sure that we don’t have [economic] dependencies in key areas.

    My message to my colleagues is, there’s two ways we can do this.

    We can either revert into saying we’re all going to try and solve this by ourselves, which is essentially protectionism, which will mean that the world will go back to the Dark Ages when we didn’t have free trade, or we can try and resolve this issue together, which actually is a more resilient solution because there will be more options. It’ll be cheaper, we’ll get there more quickly.

    Of course, we need to make sure when it comes to China, that we don’t have dependencies when it comes to key technologies. And that work is continuing apace.

    You can say things out of office that you can’t necessarily say in office. But I would say that if you’re saying is there a big difference between my approach and [French finance minister] Bruno Le Maire’s approach when it comes to making sure that we have economic resilience, that we are de-risking supply chains, I don’t think there is a big difference.

    I think we both recognize that we need to learn lessons from what happened in Ukraine.

    On Macron’s idea that Europe needs to band together and break away from U.S. leadership.

    Ukraine stands free and independent today because of leadership by the United States.

    And I would say also, that contrary to what Putin wanted, there has been complete unity in Europe, standing foursquare behind the Ukrainians.

    That says to me one very simple thing: That when Europe and the United States stand together, we can successfully defend democracy and freedom around the world.

    And that to me is not just the big lesson of the last year, but it’s actually the big lesson of the last 100 years as well.

    I see the need for Europe to invest more in its own defense. I don’t think it’s sustainable in the long run for Europe to say that we’re going to depend on American taxpayers to fund a third to a half of our defense needs in Europe. Absolutely not.

    And so we need to contribute more to our own defense. But we need to do so in a way that is working hand in glove with other countries that share our democratic values — and the leading one of those is the United States.

    On the extent to which the U.K.’s response to the Inflation Reduction Act will amount to more subsidies for green industries.

    Although we have concerns about elements of the Inflation Reduction Act ending up being protectionist, which we think would be a bad thing for the United States and for the rest of the world, we don’t think of it as a bad thing.

    We think that the world is more likely to get to net zero [greenhouse gas emissions] because of the Inflation Reduction Act because it’s going to provoke a huge amount of additional investment in clean energy.

    And we think the world, not just the United States, will get to net zero more cheaply as a result of the Inflation Reduction Act because of the technology advances that will happen, which will end up going well beyond the shores of the U.S.

    We’re not going to get involved in a subsidy race. But we will have a comprehensive response to the Inflation Reduction Act.

    We’ve waited because we wanted to see what the EU response was going to be. We think we’ve got an idea of what that’s going to be. And I’ve committed to coming forward with the U.K. response in my autumn statement later on in the year.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Pakistan: Imran’s security chief arrested on ‘money-laundering’ charges

    Pakistan: Imran’s security chief arrested on ‘money-laundering’ charges

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    Islamabad: Pakistans Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has confirmed arresting Iftikhar Rasool Ghumman, who is the security in-charge of former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, in a “money-laundering case”, media reports said on Thursday.

    The Anti-Money Laundering Cell (AMLC) of the agency busted an internally active racket involved in the illegal business of money-laundering based out of Lahore and arrested two members of the gang, the FIA said, The News reported.

    According to the FIA officials, Ghumman was running a fake international money-laundering network along with Qaisar Mushtaq and Asim Hussain, the report said.

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    The officials said the entire network has been exposed and the people engaged in money laundering through ‘hundi’ and ‘hawala’ have been rounded up, adding that the racket was involved in transferring billions of rupees to different countries through illegal ways.

    They added that the racket was using more than 40 fake companies for transferring money to other countries.

    Rejecting the FIA allegations, sources in the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) said Ghumman is a credible party leader who ran established international business in different countries, and that he was authorised to take care of the imports and exports on behalf of the party, The News reported.

    Condemning the arrest, PTI chief Imran Khan alleged that people close to him are being harassed, abducted and tortured.

    In a series of tweets, Khan said: “Today, my security in-charge Iftikhar Ghumman has been abducted. This is all part of the London Plan where Nawaz Sharif was given assurances that PTI would be crushed.”

    “So now people close to me, along with my leadership, are being harassed, abducted, tortured and confronted with sham cases across Pakistan in total violation of the Constitution and rule of law,” the former premier added.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • MP: RSS chief to visit Ram temple and gurdwara during Burhanpur visit on April 16-17

    MP: RSS chief to visit Ram temple and gurdwara during Burhanpur visit on April 16-17

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    Indore: Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) chief Mohan Bhagwat will be on a two-day visit to Burhanpur city in Madhya Pradesh beginning April 16 during which he will visit a Ram temple and a gurdwara, a Sangh office-bearer said on Tuesday.

    Bhagwat will also participate in different programs.

    Burhanpur, called the “gateway of southern India”, due to its geographical location, once used to be a major centre of the Mughal sultanate and culture.

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    However, according to the Sangh, “Brahmapur” is the ancient name of Burhanpur, a city with a huge population of Muslims.

    Vinay Dixit, the publicity head of the Sangh’s Malwa prant unit, said in a release that Bhagwat will participate in a programme of renovation of Govindnath Maharaj’s samadhi at Mahajanapeth in Burhanpur on April 16. He will visit the newly-constructed Shri Ram temple and address devotees. Bhagwat will also pay obeisance at the historic “Badi Sangat Gurdwara” in the Lodhipura area.

    Dixit said RSS founder K B Hedgewar had come to Burhanpur in 1937 and the first ‘shakha’ of the Sangh was started in Mahajanapeth.

    On April 17, Bhagwat will attend the office inauguration ceremony at Dr Hedgewar Smarak Samiti of Burhanpur, a social organisation, and will address people.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana BJP chief vs Warangal CP in SSC paper leak case

    Telangana BJP chief vs Warangal CP in SSC paper leak case

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    Hyderabad: Warangal Police Commissioner AV Ranganath on Tuesday refuted BJP state president Bandi Sanjay Kumar’s claims that he was involved in ‘settlements’.

    The Karimnagar BJP MP in a press statement on Monday alleged that the cop made money through corrupt means.

    Ranganath demanded to know why these charges had not been made sooner and stated that he is ready to resign from his position if Sanjay proved his allegations.

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    “Many BJP, BRS, and Congress workers have been detained in Nalgonda and Khammam in the past, and now in Warangal. Why were such claims that had not been made previously were being made now?” he questioned.

    Ranganath, speaking at a news conference in Hanmakonda, said it looked like Sanjay fabricated the claims ‘out of rage’ after being jailed.

    “People in the places where I’ve worked remember and greet me with affection. I deliver my duties beyond politics,” he continued, inviting Sanjay to come and witness for himself who addressed him during the police commissionerate’s public complaints meetings. “No real-estate brokers or big businessmen come here, only ordinary folks seeking justice do,” he remarked.

    The Warangal CP further said that rowdies, land grabbers, individuals against whom the PD Act was applied, and other criminals engaged in cases because of him may have met with Sanjay and made such complaints. “Sanjay was not entirely aware of the circumstances of the Vijayawada Ayesha case,” Ranganath said.

    He stated that he had taken an oath before taking the position and that he was willing to take it again if the MP desired.

    “People performed palabhishekam because they believed in my righteousness. It is incorrect to accuse an officer with the rank of Commissioner of Police of attempting to avoid the case, and warning the investigating officer to be cautious is equivalent to intimidation,” the CP stated.

    Ranganath stated that all evidence on the Telangana BJP chief’s phone had been filed to the court and that the phone was not with the police. The phone’s final call was made at 1.14 a.m., and its position was traced to Bejjenki, according to Ranganath.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Germany can’t fulfill NATO obligations, says army chief in leaked memo

    Germany can’t fulfill NATO obligations, says army chief in leaked memo

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    BERLIN — Germany’s land forces cannot fulfill their NATO commitments, according to a leaked memo from a top soldier cited in a German media report.

    A division that Germany promised to NATO isn’t fully ready for battle, Bild newspaper reported Tuesday, citing a routine “leadership message” from Alfons Mais, the army’s inspector general, to the armed forces’ inspector general.  

    The memo increases pressure on Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, who is being confronted with the Bundeswehr’s structural problems that also faced his predecessors.

    Berlin had promised a fully-equipped army division to NATO in response to Russia’s war on Ukraine as early as 2025, two years earlier than planned. 

    However, without countermeasures, “the army will not be able to hold its own in high-intensity combat and will also only be able to fulfill its obligations to NATO to a limited extent,” the army chief was quoted by the newspaper.

    A spokesperson for the German defense ministry told POLITICO that it generally does not comment on “internal documents” and the “state of readiness.” However, the commitment for 2025 remains unchanged, the spokesperson added. The German army, the Bundeswehr’s land forces, declined to comment “on a classified document and its content.”

    The operational readiness of a second division, which the Bundeswehr plans to provide from 2027, is also considered “unrealistic” according to the report, as the division will “not be sufficiently equipped with large-scale equipment in 2027.”

    According to the report, Mais wrote that even pulling together all of the army’s assets would not make it possible to fully equip the 2025 division. The report cited continued underfunding and military support for Ukraine as strains that are already leading to a “clearly noticeable reduction in the army’s operational readiness.”

    On the first day of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, Mais said on social media that the German land forces were “more or less bare” in view of the new threats.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Hyderabad: B Nagya is new Principal Chief Operations Manager at SCR

    Hyderabad: B Nagya is new Principal Chief Operations Manager at SCR

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    Hyderabad: B Nagya, a senior railway official from the 1989 batch of Indian Railway Traffic Service took charge as Principal Chief Operations Manager of South Central Railway (SCR) at Rail Nilayam, Secunderabad on Monday.

    A native of Kodad, Suryapet, Nagya did his B.Tech from NIT-Warangal in Civil Engineering and M.Tech from IIT-Delhi.

    He worked as Principal Chief Commercial Manager, East Coast Railway, Bhubaneswar, Chief Freight Transportation Manager (CFTM), Chief Passenger Transportation Manager (CPTM) and Chief Transport Planning Manager (CTPM) on SCR prior to his appointment.

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    He also has experience working as Chief Freight Transportation Manager (CFTM) on South Western Railway.

    During his Railway service, he discharged deputation to Singareni Collieries Company Limited (SCCL) as executive director of the coal movement for nearly 5 years.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hochul nominates new chief judge in New York after initial rejection

    Hochul nominates new chief judge in New York after initial rejection

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    Senate Democrats rejected Hochul’s initial pick for chief judge, Hector LaSalle, in a floor vote in February, saying he was too moderate and had several decisions that were anti-abortion rights or anti-labor — positions he disputed during his hourslong testimony in January.

    But Democrats were on board with Wilson, who is deemed as part of the more liberal side of the court. They said it is important to pick a candidate that will defend abortion rights in the face of last year’s U.S. Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade and the recent Texas case to ban the abortion pill mifepristone.

    “I am particularly excited about the prospect of Judge Wilson leading our state’s highest court as chief judge,” Senate Deputy Majority Leader Mike Gianaris said in a statement. “He is exactly the type of person who can restore the integrity and reputation of the Court of Appeals after the damaging tenure of the previous administration.”

    Hochul is able to nominate both Wilson and Halligan from the same pool of candidates after lawmakers approved a law change earlier this month. Previously, each pick to the Court of Appeals required a separate list from the Commission on Judicial Nomination.

    Hochul said Wilson has also agreed to recommend Joseph Zayas, an appellate court judge in New York City, as chief administrative judge to oversee the entire court system.

    The Democratic governor began her year with a rocky start when the Senate Judiciary Committee, for the first time since governors nominated chief judges in the 1970s, rejected LaSalle. After a GOP lawsuit pushed Democrats for a full floor vote, LaSalle was then voted down on the Senate floor.

    Several others expressed their support for Hochul’s latest picks, including Senate Judiciary Chair Brad Hoylman-Sigal. The Senate will need to soon take up confirmation hearings on both judicial nominees.

    “The importance of these nominees to New York’s highest court cannot be overstated, especially given recent decisions by federal courts on issues such as abortion, gun safety, labor and the environment,” Hoylman-Sigal said in a statement. “I look forward to working with my colleagues to conduct fair and thorough hearings to examine the extensive records of Associate Judge Rowan and Ms. Halligan.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden’s economic chief draws doubts over her Fed past

    Biden’s economic chief draws doubts over her Fed past

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     As a Fed governor, Brainard voted along with the rest of the board for the series of interest rate hikes that helped push two weak banks to failure in March. And though she has long been a vocal champion of strong bank oversight, financial reform advocates — and even some White House allies — are asking whether she will be tagged with any responsibility herself for the Fed’s failure to spot problems at Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank before they imploded in March.

    “All of the failure of supervision stuff for the last six to nine months implicates the Fed,” said a person close to the White House, who requested anonymity to speak freely about a sensitive personnel topic. “And all the investigations will focus on the Fed. There is just no way that can’t be awkward both for Lael and for the White House, even if there is nothing specific she did wrong.” 

    Behind the scenes, Brainard has been taking a lead role in the administration’s efforts to deal with the failed banks and reassure depositors that their money is safe, according to half a dozen senior administration officials and several others close to Brainard outside the White House. And in an extraordinary move driven by Brainard, the White House recently called on the Fed to undo many of the deregulatory steps that it took during the Trump administration — actions that Brainard had opposed while she was there.

    Her role in mapping out a policy to deal with the turmoil underscores how quickly the administration realized it was facing a potential crisis for the economy and Biden’s re-election chances.

    But some of the people inside and outside the administration say her association with the Fed — the main regulator of the nation’s banks — leading up to the meltdown of the two lenders is also limiting her ability to publicly challenge the central bank’s actions, given the tradition in which former Fed officials refrain from criticizing onetime colleagues. 

    “There is a social, institutional, and reputational cost to being viewed as violating Federal Reserve norms of clubbiness,” said Jeff Hauser, director of the Revolving Door Project. “Being perceived as `politicizing the Fed’ would likely cause members of the Fed club to view her as disloyal. It’s also likely that even as Brainard was perhaps the best dissenter ever at the Fed, that nonetheless she felt pressure to pull some punches.”

    The White House declined to make Brainard available for an interview.

    White House officials rejected the idea that she is shying away from criticizing the Fed. Instead, they argue that her dissents at the central bank speak for themselves and that when the crisis hit, Brainard simply dug deep into the work of helping organize the response while keeping Biden and new White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients briefed on developments. 

    These people say that public communication was rightly limited to principal players including the president, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, FDIC Chair Martin Gruenberg and Fed Chair Jerome Powell. The new NEC director will eventually play a more visible role, they say.

    Brainard played the most critical part inside the White House in selling Biden on the need to designate SVB and Signature as risks to the financial system, opening them up to a federal rescue of their depositors, according to the people.

    Biden, bruised by the political blowback over Wall Street bailouts when he served as vice president, entered the March weekend of SVB’s collapse wary of anything that could be seen as rescuing the well-heeled tech executives and investors who made up much of SVB’s deposit base.

    It fell to Brainard to explain why such a big federal move — which could be taken as an implicit guarantee for all deposits of any failing FDIC-insured institution — was the only option to avoid a much longer and more brutal crisis.

    White House colleagues praise Brainard’s work under pressure the weekend SVB collapsed.

    “She knows how the Fed works, she knows how Treasury works and how the entire bank regulatory system works,” said Bharat Ramamurti, deputy NEC director and former senior staffer for Sen. Elizabeth Warren who was a candidate for the top NEC job before it went to Brainard.

    Ramamurti and other senior administration officials said Brainard quickly delegated her staff to assess market conditions and the likely impact of various possible solutions proposed by other agencies. Then she organized it all into concise briefings for Zients and Biden.

    “Communication was clear, tasks were well-assigned and it never felt like we were just spinning around,” Ramamurti said of the wild March weekend when White House, Fed, Treasury and FDIC officials conducted nearly nonstop video calls to get to a solution before markets opened in Asia.

    As for her previous role at the Fed, Brainard’s many defenders across the ideological spectrum say that not only did she not do anything wrong while serving as vice chair, but that she  strongly and publicly dissented from efforts to roll back regulations — often acting alone. She repeatedly warned that they could lead to just this kind of crisis.

    “Lael fought an incredible rearguard action against all the nonsense,” said MIT Professor Simon Johnson, a proponent of tougher banking rules. “There was no one else left in the room. I have no idea how she did it. But thank goodness she stuck it out.”

    Still, as the banking crisis saga moves further into the phase of hearings, blame-casting and calls for change, Brainard’s years at the Fed will likely get a closer look from Congress.

    Republicans say the collapse of SVB and Signature was the result of both mismanagement at the banks and the failure of regulators, primarily the Fed, rather than the result of all the Trump-era rule relaxation. They contend that Fed governors should have known that their interest rate hikes could topple weak banks.

    At a recent hearing, Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), the ranking member on the Banking Committee and a likely 2024 GOP presidential contender, said the Fed “should have been keenly aware of the impact interest rate hikes would have on the value of securities, and it should have been actively working to ensure the bank and supervisors were hedging their bets and covering their risk accordingly.”

    In a letter to Powell and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, Scott wrote of the “apparent failure of SVB’s regulators, including the Federal Reserve, the primary federal regulator responsible for examining and supervising SVB, to ensure that the bank operated in a safe and sound manner.”

    The Fed itself is looking for answers.

    Michael Barr, the vice chair of supervision who is conducting an internal review of rules on bank capital and oversight issues, acknowledged that everyone who worked at the Fed in the years leading up to the bank failures would probably come under scrutiny.

    “We expect to be held accountable,” he told lawmakers last month.

    Some Democrats also ripped into Fed regulators both in California and Washington for failing to escalate warnings about SVB’s rapid deposit growth and ballooning balance sheet problems into earlier action.

    “It’s just a complex moment for Lael because most of the ballgame is around the Fed and most of the discussion now is about investigating potential supervisory failures,” the person close to the White House said. “It’s a tough spot for her.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Misconceptions hindering India’s progress towards vishwaguru status: RSS chief

    Misconceptions hindering India’s progress towards vishwaguru status: RSS chief

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    Mumbai: Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh chief Mohan Bhagwat on Sunday said misconceptions and distorted information were being spread about India to slow down its progress towards becoming a ‘vishwaguru’.

    Speaking at a function in Mumbai, Bhagwat said such misconceptions were spread about the country post 1857 (after the First War of Independence) but such elements got a befitting reply from Swami Vivekanand.

    These misconceptions were being spread to slow down our progress as “nobody in the world can argue with us on the basis of logic,” he added.

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    “We are going to be a vishwaguru in the next 20-30 years. For that, we need to prepare at least two generations who will experience the change,” Bhagwat said.

    India had achieved a lot over the years but distorted information was being spread globally, to counter which the country needs to prepare it generations and also to attract “good people in the world towards us”, Bhagwat said.

    “Post 1857, some misconceptions were spread against us. It was Swami Vivekanand who gave a befitting reply to those who looked down upon us,” said the RSS chief.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )