Tag: continued

  • JK Bank CEO Assures Continued Support To Industrial Sector During Interaction With Entrepreneurs

    JK Bank CEO Assures Continued Support To Industrial Sector During Interaction With Entrepreneurs

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    SRINAGAR: J&K Bank’s MD & CEO, Baldev Prakash, engaged in a direct conversation with individuals associated with the industrial sector on Saturday. The interaction took place at the Industrial Growth Centre in Pulwama and involved representatives from the Industrial Association Lassipora, led by its president Haji Muzaffar. Accompanying the MD & CEO were senior officials of the bank, including General Manager Corporate Banking Ashutosh Sareen, General Manager Credit & Business Operations (Kashmir Division) Tabassum Nazir, Zonal Head Pulwama Tariq Ali, Zonal Head Srinagar Shabir Ahmad, and other high-ranking executives.

    President of the Cold Stores Association, Majid Aslam Wafai, along with dozens of entrepreneurs, participated in the interactive session conducted by the Industrial Association Lassipora, representing hundreds of unit holders housed in one of the leading industrial centers of North India.

    During the session, MD & CEO assured the participants of the bank’s continued patronage and handholding to the industrial sector within regulatory norms. He stated that establishing large credit units with dedicated and well-trained relationship managers was a step in the direction of easing and facilitating business for entrepreneurs. He further insisted that the turnaround time of credit proposals would be minimized further with the introduction of more digital platforms. He stated that it was time for the bank and the industrial sector to join hands to take the economic prosperity of the UT to another level.

    Haji Muzaffar, while calling J&K Bank “Humara Apna Bank,” said, “It gives us immense pleasure that you have come to listen to the people who consider J&K Bank as their own bank and J&K’s backbone. We have gone through thick and thin, but our trust and connection with J&K Bank hasn’t dwindled a bit.” He added, “However, we expect J&K Bank to realign some of its strategies to keep pace with changing scenarios in the industrial sector.”

    Majid Wafai hailed the bank management headed by MD & CEO for giving a patient hearing to unit holders. He stated, “Our units wouldn’t have materialized had there not been financial support from J&K Bank. The majority of us are first-generation entrepreneurs, and J&K Bank has guided and supported us in setting up these units. Our successful journeys are synonymous with J&K Bank, and it gives us heart and hope that our mentoring financial institution has embarked on the path of renewed success and profitability.”

    During the interaction, General Manager Ashutosh Sareen highlighted various steps taken by the bank to encourage entrepreneurial excellence in the region. The session concluded with a vote of thanks by General Manager Tabassum Nazir, who stated that customer satisfaction was the cornerstone of the bank’s success.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Memphis pastor prays for continued peace after video release

    Memphis pastor prays for continued peace after video release

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    During the church service, Thomas offered a prayer for Nichols’ family, asking God to “shower them with your blessings.”

    The loss is “still very emotional” for the family, a lawyer representing them said Sunday, but they are using all their energy to advocate for reforms both in Memphis and on the federal level.

    “His mother is having problems sleeping but she continues to pray with the understanding, as she believes in her heart, that Tyre was sent here for an assignment, and that there will be a greater good that comes from this tragedy,” Attorney Ben Crump said on ABC’s “This Week.”

    Crump welcomed disbanding the city’s so-called Scorpion unit, which Police Director Cerelyn “CJ” Davis announced Saturday, citing a “cloud of dishonor” from the newly released video.

    Davis acted a day after the harrowing video was released, saying she listened to Nichols’ relatives, community leaders and uninvolved officers in making the decision. Her announcement came as the nation and the city struggled to come to grips with the violence of the officers, who are also Black. The video renewed outrage over repeated fatal encounters with law enforcement that keep happening despite nationwide demands for change.

    Crump told “This Week” that Nichols’ case points to a systemic problem in how people of color are treated regardless of whether officers are white, Black or any other race.

    The “implicit, biased police” culture that exists in America is just as responsible for Nichols’ death as the five Black officers who killed him, Crump said.

    “I believe it’s part of the institutionalized police culture that makes it somehow allowed that they can use this type of excessive force and brutality against people of color,” Crump told “This Week.” “It is not the race of the police officer that is the determinant factor whether they’re going to engage in excessive use of force, but it is the race of the citizen.”

    He alleged other members of the Memphis community have been assaulted by the now shuttered Scorpion unit, which was composed of three teams of about 30 officers whose stated aim was to target violent offenders in high-crime areas. The unit had been inactive since Nichols’ Jan. 7 arrest.

    Scorpion stands for Street Crimes Operations to Restore Peace In Our Neighborhoods.

    The five officers involved in Nichols’ beating — Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Desmond Mills Jr., Emmitt Martin III and Justin Smith — have been fired and charged with murder and other crimes in Nichols’ death. They face up to 60 years in prison if convicted of second-degree murder.

    Video images of Nichols’ encounter with police show officers savagely beating the FedEx worker for three minutes while screaming profanities at him. Nichols calls out for his mother before his limp body is propped against a squad car and the officers exchange fist-bumps.

    Brenda Goss Andrews, president of the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, told The Associated Press she was struck by the immediate aggression from officers as soon as they got out of the car: “It just went to 100. … This was never a matter of de-escalation,” she said, adding, “The young man never had a chance.”

    On a phone call with President Joe Biden, Crump and Nichols parents discussed the need federal reform like the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which would prohibit racial profiling, ban chokeholds and no-knock warrants, limit the transfer of military equipment to police departments, and make it easier to bring charges against offending officers.

    Biden said he told Nichols’ mother he would be “making a case” to Congress to pass the Floyd Act “to get this under control.”

    Memphis Police had already implemented reforms after Floyd’s killing, including a requirement to de-escalate or intervene if they saw others using excessive force.

    Speaking on “This Week,” Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, who chairs the Judiciary Committee, said Congress can pass additional measures like “screening, training, accreditation, to up the game so that the people who have this responsibility to keep us safe really are stable and approaching this in a professional manner.”

    The fact that law enforcement is primarily a state and local responsibility “does not absolve us. Under the federal Constitution we have standards, due process standards and others, that we are responsible for,” Durbin said.

    “What we saw on the streets of Memphis was just inhumane and horrible,” he continued. “I don’t know what created this — this rage in these police officers that they would congratulate themselves for beating a man to death. But that is literally what happened.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )