Tag: Days

  • Sau­di Ara­bia, Iran to re­open em­bassies ‘with­in days’

    Sau­di Ara­bia, Iran to re­open em­bassies ‘with­in days’

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    Beirut: Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian said that Saudi Arabia and Iran will reopen their embassies in both countries within days.

    This comes after the two countries agreed to restore relations in March after a series of events in 2016 led to the severing of diplomatic relations.

    Amir-Abdollahian made the statement during a press conference in the Lebanese capital of Beirut.

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    Abdollahian added that his Saudi counterpart, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, would accept his invitation to visit Tehran pointing out that he had received a similar invitation to visit the Kingdom.

    He indicated that the date of the two visits would be agreed upon “through diplomatic channels.” 

    Earlier this April, the Saudi newspaper “Okaz” revealed the Iranian embassy in Riyadh opened its doors for the first time in seven years.

    On April 6 in Beijing, the foreign ministers of Iran and Saudi Arabia signed a joint statement to begin arrangements to reopen embassies and consulates, expand bilateral relations and cooperation, and resume flights.

    These steps come after Saudi Arabia and Iran announced on March 10 the resumption of diplomatic relations between the two countries, and the reopening of their embassies, following Chinese mediation, after seven years of tensions.

    The relationship began to deteriorate in 2015 after Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) intervened in the Yemen war after the Iran-aligned Houthi group overthrew the Riyadh-backed government and took control of the capital, Sanaa.

    Tensions between the two countries have led to conflicts across the region, including the Syrian Civil War.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad: Rs 625 cr property tax collected by GHMC in 28 days

    Hyderabad: Rs 625 cr property tax collected by GHMC in 28 days

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    Hyderabad: Under the Early Bird Scheme for the financial year 2023-24, the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) has generated property tax worth Rs 625 crore in 28 days from over 6.35 lakh assessments.

    The scheme offers a 5 per cent rebate (given only on the current year’s tax and not on the arrears) on property tax to building owners from April 1 to 30.

    While Rs 25.43 crore were collected on Tuesday alone, the officials were expecting the revenue to cross Rs 750 crore.

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    Serilingampally Circle scored the highest with Rs 78.29 crore tax collected from the area followed by Jubilee Hills with Rs 63.35 crore and Khairatabad with Rs 50.14 crore.

    GHMC generated Rs 742.41 crore in revenue last year with a target of Rs 750 crore set for this financial year.

    Also, the corporation’s Citizen Service Centres (CSCs) were kept open on Sunday (April 23) from 10.30 am to 5 pm to facilitate the payment of property taxes while most of the property owners paid tax online this year.

    Citizens interested to avail of a 5 per cent rebate under this scheme can pay the property tax online on the website or use the My GHMC App.

    People may also reach out to GHMC Citizen Services Centres, MeeSeva centres or bill collectors to pay the tax.

    Action against property tax defaulters and fraudulent entries in the Property Tax Self Assessment application has been initiated by the corporation this year.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘I was decadent, I was stupid, I was a fool’: the dark days of Donna Summer

    ‘I was decadent, I was stupid, I was a fool’: the dark days of Donna Summer

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    In a New York hotel room in 1976, Donna Summer stepped towards the window ledge. She had become instantly famous the previous year for her pseudo-orgasmic vocals on her single Love to Love You Baby, which had reached No 2 in the US and Top 10 across most of Europe. But, unknown to her fans, she was horribly conflicted over the sexualised performance, and also in the grip of a violently abusive relationship. She began climbing up.

    “Another 10 seconds and I would have been gone,” she later said – but her foot became entangled in a curtain and at that moment a maid entered. “I felt God could never forgive me because I had failed him,” she explained. “I was decadent, I was stupid, I was a fool. I just decided that my life had no meaning.”

    These feelings were hidden from a public who knew her as one of US pop’s most enchanting and formidably talented figures, the woman who would later sing the world-changing I Feel Love, the strutting Hot Stuff and Bad Girls, the bombastic pop of She Works Hard for the Money, and so many other effervescent hits. Even now, 11 years since she died of cancer, her producer and co-writer Pete Bellotte still regards her as “the best voice I’ve ever recorded. She’d sing with this incredible, intuitive feel. She would own a song immediately. Everything was always one take – she never struggled.”

    Donna Summer and husband Bruce Sudano in New York City, 1980
    Summer and her second husband, Bruce Sudano, in New York City, 1980. Photograph: Images Press/Getty Images

    But – as explored in a new documentary, Love to Love You, Donna Summer – behind her shiny queen-of-disco persona was a great deal of struggle. Summer was secretly racked with trauma, guilt and insecurities. “I have been changed for ever from this process,” says the film’s co-director – and Summer’s daughter – Brooklyn Sudano. “I feel grateful to be on this side of it, because it was very intense.”

    When Summer sang in church as a child, she sometimes struggled to hit the high notes. Frustrated, one day she prayed: “God, please teach me how to sing better.” Church was a source of faith and hope for the young Summer. She grew up in a deeply religious household, but as a teen she was sexually abused by the pastor. “He did the devil’s work better than most,” says Summer’s brother Ricky Gaines in the film. “It became a defining moment in her life.”

    This moment, which Summer didn’t detail publicly until she published her memoirs in 2003, is the thread that runs through the documentary. “You’re looking at me, but what you see is not what I am,” we hear Summer say early on in the film. “How many roles do I play in my own life?”

    It is a question that Sudano set out to ask with her co-director, Roger Ross Williams (who in 2010 became the first African-American director to win an Oscar, for his documentary short Music by Prudence). “We wanted to make a very personal, honest film,” says Sudano. “To have a true understanding of the mom, sister and wife that we knew – a complex, artistic and colourful woman.”

    Much of the film is made up of Summer’s own footage, as she was a keen amateur director who liked to shoot movies on the road or at home. There are films of her as a spoof fortune teller, at family Christmases, hotel-room dance parties, quietly sitting at a piano, and letting her voice ring out pristinely through the family home. Musical milestones pepper her life, including her eight US Top 5 hits in a whirlwind 18-month stretch in the late 70s.

    Despite being endorsed by her family, the film is not glossy PR. “The first thing I asked Brooklyn was: are you willing to go to uncomfortable places and be brutally honest?” says Williams. The result is an intimate look at an artist who carried hidden darkness while publicly typifying glamour and sexuality.

    Donna Summer performing in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in 2010
    Summer performing in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in 2010. Photograph: Zuma Press/Alamy

    Growing up in Boston, Massachusetts, Summer was subjected to racism from an early age and was beaten by gangs of white youths; a facial scar left her feeling “ugly” and “inadequate”. She also nearly died from drowning when she was eight. The person she grew into was funny and wildly talented, but also guarded and private. When she became a mother, she kept her bedroom locked, off limits even to her own children; when she was diagnosed with lung cancer in her final years, she told nobody outside her immediate family. “That was very hard,” says Sudano. “We respected her journey, but it was difficult, because people would ask questions and we’d have to go: ‘Oh, she’s fine.’”

    This duality – of private sadness while pretending publicly that everything was rosy – became the film’s core theme. “After her passing, a lot of people came up to me and did not have closure,” says Sudano. “They wanted to understand why she would make that choice [not to tell them]. I thought: we need to tell the story – but really tell it.”

    After moving to New York to be in the psych-rock band Crow, Summer landed a role in the musical Hair. The production took her to Germany in 1968, where five years later she ended up marrying the Austrian actor Helmuth Sommer and having their daughter Mimi. Working as a backing singer in Munich, she met the producers Bellotte and Giorgio Moroder.

    Donna Summer’s daughter Brooklyn Sudano with Roger Ross Williams, co-director of Love to You, Donna Summer
    Summer’s daughter Brooklyn Sudano with Roger Ross Williams, the co-director of Love to You, Donna Summer. Photograph: Robby Klein/Contour by Getty Images

    By 1975, the three of them had written Love to Love You Baby, the blueprint for sultry disco that was so literal in its performance of sexual moans and groans that the BBC banned it. But, as early as 1976, it was something Summer didn’t want to define her. “I have so much more to offer,” she told Rolling Stone.

    The highly eroticised music was also fundamentally at odds with Summer’s background – as a child, her father smacked her for wearing red nail polish because, he said, “that’s what whores wore”. Bellotte recalls going to a launch party for the raunchy single, but not being introduced to Summer’s parents. “I think we were the enemies,” he says.

    It created a deep inner conflict – and Summer’s rapid ascent to fame was matched by her mental decline. “The most dismal days of my existence were at the height of my career,” she said. As she struggled, Mimi was sent to live with her grandparents and Summer, now separated from her husband, endured an abusive relationship with the artist Peter Mühldorfer. One beating left her unconscious, with a black eye and broken ribs. By the end of 1976, Summer was contemplating killing herself in that hotel room.

    “We were sometimes afraid going into these conversations with Brooklyn’s relatives – there were a lot of tears,” says Williams. They even tracked down Mühldorfer, who reflects: “I hit her and I never could forgive myself.”

    “One of the foundational pillars of this film is that these hard conversations are necessary,” says Sudano. “I knew that my mother had forgiven him, so I felt comfortable with having the conversation, and by doing that you bring healing.”

    When it is revealed that Mimi was also sexually abused as a child, in the family home by someone related to the housekeeper, the film moves even further away from traditional music documentary and into one exploring generational trauma and the complexities of that when entangled in family, faith and fame. “Mimi’s story was integral,” says Sudano. “It’s so intertwined with my mother’s life and her struggles with motherhood and how to reconcile her own trauma. There has been a lot of healing for Mimi personally, but also us as a family. Even if nothing had happened with the film, the biggest gift was to be able to help facilitate that process for her.”

    Donna Summer with the producer Giorgio Moroder
    Summer with the producer Giorgio Moroder, one of the co-writers of her 70s mega-hit Love to Love You Baby. Photograph: Echoes/Redferns

    Aside from being a form of family therapy it could also be seen as a posthumous collaborative project with Summer herself, given the story is told through her words and footage. “We always made a joke: that she was directing from heaven,” says Sudano.

    Summer’s commercial success peaked in 1979 with the multimillion-selling Bad Girls. In 1980, she married Bruce Sudano and by 1982 had two more daughters, Brooklyn and Amanda. Another hit album landed in 1983 with She Works Hard for the Money, but family life became more of a focus. So did faith, with Summer becoming a born-again Christian.

    At a 1983 concert, it was reported that she said: “God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve,” which caused significant upset among her LBGTQ+ fans – a community that had played a significant role in her breakout success. It was also reported – but strongly and tearfully refuted later by Summer in Advocate magazine – that she said Aids was God’s punishment for homosexuality.

    Williams, who is gay, recalls that period. “I was so impacted and hurt by the ‘Adam and Steve’ comment. So I wanted to explore that in this film and know why.” Summer attempted to make amends and performed at Aids benefits, while publicly stating: “What people want to do with their own bodies is their personal preference.” While she still retains icon status for many LGBTQ+ people, Summer felt her relationship with her gay fans had been tarnished. “To have this asterisk on your legacy was devastating,” Sudano says. “That was very difficult for her to get over, because she loved people and particularly that community. Again, it’s about healing. It’s acknowledging that this was a terrible thing that was super-hurtful.”

    In the film, Sudano says she is “trying to figure out the many pieces of who Mom was”. Has she? “I now have so much more understanding,” she says. “It was really new to grasp how instrumental these moments were in her life and how she felt like she couldn’t talk about so much of it just in order to survive. She did so much with not a lot of tools.”

    Love To Love You, Donna Summer is on HBO and HBO Max in the US and Sky Documentaries in the UK next month

    In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is at 988, or chat for support. You can also text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis text line counsellor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Ali died days before he could challenge BP’s CEO on the dangers of gas flaring. Don’t let his death be in vain | Jess Kelly

    Ali died days before he could challenge BP’s CEO on the dangers of gas flaring. Don’t let his death be in vain | Jess Kelly

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    Ali Hussein Jaloud, a 21-year-old Iraqi who lives next to one of BP’s biggest oilfields, was meant to ask a question at the company’s annual shareholder meeting today. He was going to challenge the CEO on why his company continues to poison his neighbourhood with cancer-causing pollution. But, just a few days ago, Ali died of a form of leukaemia that has been linked to chemicals released by the burning of fossil fuels. His grieving father will ask why BP did not use its vast profits to help save his life.

    Over the past two years, my fellow investigator Owen Pinnell and I got to know Ali while making a documentary for BBC News Arabic, Under Poisoned Skies, which revealed the deadly impact of gas flaring in southern Iraq, including at BP’s Rumaila oilfield where Ali lives, surrounded by oil company-patrolled checkpoints. We also found out that Rumaila has more gas flaring than any other oilfield in the world.

    Routine gas flaring is a wasteful and avoidable practice used by oil companies to burn off the natural gas expelled during drilling. The process releases both greenhouse gases and dangerous air pollution. The gas could be captured instead and used to power people’s homes, saving them from dangerous emissions. But for more than a decade, BP and its partners have failed to build the necessary infrastructure. Since the Iraq war, BP has extracted oil worth £15.4bn from the country. BP said it was “extremely concerned” by the issues raised by our film (and in February said it was working to reduce flaring and emissions at Rumaila) but announced record profits from the oilfield in the year we launched the film.

    A keen footballer, Ali was diagnosed with leukaemia at 15. He had to drop out of school and his football team, and embark on two painful years of treatment. His family had to sell their furniture and take donations from their community to pay for it. “Sometimes I wished I would die so that I could stop torturing my parents,” he told us. But, miraculously, Ali survived. He was too old to return to school, so he set up a small mobile phone shop.

    Ali had been told by doctors that pollution had probably caused his cancer, and he quietly started advocating for a greener Iraq, one where children could breathe clean air. In his last Instagram post, just days before his death, Ali called for the oil companies to stop routine gas flaring and “save the youth of the country from kidney failure and cancer”.

    Excess gas is burned off near workers at the Rumaila oil field, south of Basra
    ‘In Iraq, the law states that gas flaring shouldn’t be closer than 10km (6 miles) from people’s homes.’ Excess gas is burned off near workers at the Rumaila oil field, south of Basra. Photograph: Atef Hassan/REUTERS

    Rumaila, the town where Ali was living, is heavily guarded and journalists are denied access, so we asked Ali to record video diaries documenting his daily life. In the first scene of our film, he opens his front gate to reveal a towering black cloud of smoke, just a few hundred metres away, beneath which children play hopscotch. In Iraq, the law states that gas flaring shouldn’t be closer than 10km (6 miles) from people’s homes.

    “These children are happily playing, they’re not aware of the poison that is coursing through their veins,” he says over the video. In the next shot, he loads his cute five-year-old nephew, Abyas, on to the front of his motorbike and they scoot off, passing the primary school, which is also engulfed in thick black smoke, before arriving at a spot by the canal where gas flares punctuate the skyline in every direction.

    When we showed that footage to David Boyd, the UN’s special rapporteur on human rights and the environment, he called it “a textbook example of a modern sacrifice zone, where profit is put above human life and the environment”.

    Ali helped us uncover high levels of the cancer-causing chemical, benzene, produced by gas flaring, in the air and bodies of children living in his community. Benzene is known to cause acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) – the cancer from which Ali and many other children we met were suffering. After our documentary appeared, the Iraqi government acknowledged, for the first time, the link between the oil industry’s pollution and the local population’s health problems.

    In December 2022, we found out Ali’s leukaemia had returned. His doctor in Iraq said that his only option was palliative care. But his father, who described Ali as his best friend, refused to accept this. He found a doctor at Columbia University who said that Ali could be eligible for experimental T-cell therapy. A supporter of the film, Callum Grieve, began a fundraising campaign to try to raise the £70,000 needed to send him to India. The donations were steady, but relied on the generosity of ordinary people with only small sums to give.

    I began to notice in our calls with Ali that his face looked bloated, and his cheekbones hidden because of the effects of steroids. But I had no idea we would lose him so soon. On Friday 21 April, the first night of Eid, we received the terrible news that Ali had died. We had already lost to cancer three of the children we got to know while making this film.

    A Guardian investigation found that nine million people a year die as a result of air pollution. Getting to know Ali helped to make that feel like much more than a statistic.

    Despite the barren and apocalyptic landscape Ali grew up in, he was a keen gardener. He used to send us videos of him watering the tiny, sparse patch in his front yard where he grew a handful of small palms and some unusual species like the “bambara” or white mulberry tree. When we showed him pictures of the countryside in England, he marvelled at the greenery and the clear skies. It contrasted so starkly with the constantly orange and acrid sky he was used to.

    Companies like BP are still breaking Iraq’s law by gas flaring illegally close to people’s homes. If you are looking down on us now, Ali, please know that your death will not be in vain. Britain’s biggest pension fund, Nest, and other investors are launching a shareholder rebellion against BP for rolling back on its climate targets. They told us their actions were partly inspired by our film. And this story could help secure justice for the thousands of lives put at risk by pollution from fossil fuel companies.

    • Jess Kelly is a documentary film-maker and journalist. Owen Pinnell also contributed to this piece.

    • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Hyderabad: GHMC kicks off Summer Coaching Camps for 37 days

    Hyderabad: GHMC kicks off Summer Coaching Camps for 37 days

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    Hyderabad: The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) is set to organise summer coaching camps for 37 days starting Tuesday.  

    Summer Coaching Camp 2023 was inaugurated by the Begum Bazar corporator Shankar Yadav at Khairatabad Victory Play Ground on Tuesday. 

    Speaking at the event, the Additional commissioner for Sports, Vijayalakshmi said that the coaching camps will be organised from March 25 to May 31.

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    Summer coaching will be provided in 915 centres across Greater Hyderabad. Coaching will be provided in 44 types of sports from 6:15 AM to 8:15 AM. 77 part-time coaches and 712 honorarium coaches will provide the training in the camps, said a press release.

    Children aged 6 years to 16 years are eligible to enrol on the coaching camps. The registration fee is Rs 50 fee for badminton, roller skating, cricket, and tennis and Rs 10 for other sports. Registration can be completed through the official website of GHMS.

    A march-past was conducted at the event followed by dance and gymnastic performances.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Y S Sharmila remanded to 14 days of judicial custody

    Y S Sharmila remanded to 14 days of judicial custody

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    The Nampally court remanded YSR Telangana Party president Y S Sharmila to 14 days of judicial custody on Monday evening.

    Sharmila was arrested by the Banjara Hills police for allegedly attacking police officials when they tried to prevent her from going to the office of Special Investigation Team probing the TSPSC Paper Leak case.

    When the police tried to stop her Sharmila, she reportedly slapped a woman constable and pushed them away.

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    Her driver also allegedly harmed the police.

    The Banjara Hills police booked a case under Sections 353 (assault or criminal force to deter public servant from discharge of duty), 332 (voluntarily causing hurt to deter public servant from duty), 324 (voluntary causing hurt) and 509 (word, gesture or act intended to insult the modesty of a woman) of IPC against Sharmila and her driver.
    She was arrested and produced before the court. The court sent her to judicial custody and the police shifting her to Chanchalguda Central Prison.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Detailed Weather Update For The Next 7 days – Kashmir News

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    Detailed Weather Update For The Next 7 days

    24 April: Dry weather is expected across Jammu and Kashmir.
    Sunshine = 10 to 13 hrs

    25 April: Towards late afternoon, a short spell of thundershowers is possible in a few areas of Kashmir and a few parts in Ramban, Kishtwar, Doda and Poonch districts.
    ● Gusty winds and hailstorm possible.
    Sunshine = 5 to 9.5 hrs

    26 April: Under the influence of a Western Disturbance, thundershowers can occur at many places in Kashmir and a few areas in Jammu region. (Maximum chances towards late afternoon/evening/night)
    ● Gusty winds and hailstorm possible.
    Sunshine = 3 to 7.5 hrs

    27 April: Thundershowers can occur in most areas of Kashmir and some areas in Jammu region.
    ● Gusty winds and hailstorm possible.
    Sunshine = 0 to 3 hrs

    28 April: Thundershowers can occur at many places in Kashmir and a few areas in Jammu region.
    ● Gusty winds and hailstorm possible.
    Sunshine = 1 to 5 hrs

    29 April: Thundershowers can occur in a few areas of Jammu and Kashmir.
    ● Gusty winds and hailstorm possible.
    Sunshine = 7 to 11 hrs

    30 April: Thundershowers can occur in a few areas of Jammu and Kashmir.
    ● Gusty winds and hailstorm possible.
    Sunshine = 6 to 12 hrs

    Note:
    1. A new parameter, “Sunshine,” has been added to the forecast, estimating the duration of sunlight expected throughout the day. The estimate is approximate and may vary from area to area.

    2. The current forecast is accurate based on the existing conditions. However, sometimes even minor atmospheric changes can lead to substantial deviations from the forecast. Therefore, the forecast will be updated accordingly.

    Regards: Kashmir Weather


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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • MeT Predicts Warmer Days Till April 25

    MeT Predicts Warmer Days Till April 25

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    SRINAGAR: Amid forecast for mainly “warmer days” till April 25, night temperature continued to hover below normal.

    Quoting a meteorological department official, GNS reported that generally cloudy weather was expected from April 26 to 28.

    He said there was possibility of rain and snow over upper reaches at some places duringthe time.

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    Regarding temperature, he said, Srinagar recorded a low of 5.1°C and it was 3.8°C below normal for the summer capital.

    Qazigund, he said, recorded a low of 3.6°C and it was 3.9°C below normal for the gateway town of Kashmir.

    Pahalgam, he said, recorded a low of 0.5°C and it was 3.5°C below normal for the famous tourist resort in south Kashmir’s Anantnag district.

    Kokernag recorded a low of 6.2°C and it was 1.2°C below normal for the place, the officials said.

    Gulmarg recorded a low of 3.2°C and it was 0.1°C below normal for the world famous skiing resort in north Kashmir’s Baramulla district, he said.

    In Kupwara town, he said, the mercury settled at 3.7°C and it was 3.9°C below normal for the north Kashmir area.

    Jammu recorded a low of 17.6°C. It was 3.4°C below normal for J&K’s winter capital, he said.

    Banihal, he said, recorded a low of 5.4°C (below normal by 4.0°C), Batote 9.0°C (below normal by 3.0°C), Katra 14.2°C (3.9°C below normal) and Bhadarwah 6.6°C (1.8°C below normal). Ladakh’s Leh and Kargil recorded a low of minus 0.4°C and 1.6°C respectively, the officials added.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Poonch Attack: Traffic On NHW Restored After Three Days

    Poonch Attack: Traffic On NHW Restored After Three Days

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    SRINAGAR: The vehicular movement on Jammu-Rajouri-Poonch  highway between Bhata Dhurian and Jarran Wali Gali in Poonch district has been restored on Sunday morning after remaining closed for three days.

    Traffic on highway was closed on Thursday late afternoon after militants attacked an army vehicle near Tota Gali in which five army personnel lost their lives while one is injured.

    The highway was lying closed from last three days between BG and Jarran Wali Gali with traffic was diverted through Mendhar.

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    On Sunday morning, officials said the highway has been restored and vehicular movement has been allowed. (KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • In 33 Days, 3.7 Lakh Visitors Throng Tulip Garden

    In 33 Days, 3.7 Lakh Visitors Throng Tulip Garden

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    SRINAGAR: Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip garden, located on the foothills of Zabarwan mountain range, turned out to be a major tourist attraction in Kashmir this year with over 3.7 lac visitors from far and wide thronging the garden to enjoy the diverse hues of nature at display.

    The Tulip garden spanning over an area of 30 hectares (74 acres) has on a year-to-year basis pulled record number of visitors from all across be it the local, the national or the foreigners.

    The figures suggest that a total of 377201 tourists of which 315266 included domestic, 3259 foreigners and 58676 locals visited the garden over a period of 33 days – after thrown open to visitors on March 19,2023 upto April 20, 2023.

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    As per an official, the footfall this season was the highest ever. “We had 3.6 lakh tourists visiting the garden last year and this year it saw an increase making it the highest ever footfall in the history of this garden”, the official told GNS adding the period of tulip bloom this season lasted for 33 days, as compared to last year’s 27 day period, largely due to  mild weather conditions.

    “There were 68 varieties of tulips on display in the garden this season, out of these varieties, four new ones were introduced this year: Hamilton, Sweetheart, Cafe Noir and Christmas Dream”, the official said.

    Expressing his satisfaction over the record number of visitors, the official further said the enormous flow of Tourists from within and outside the country motivates us and imbues in us courage to do more to make the visit to the garden a memorable experience.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )