Tag: draw

  • 2 Indian expats take home Rs 22 lakh each in UAE’s Big Ticket draw

    2 Indian expats take home Rs 22 lakh each in UAE’s Big Ticket draw

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    Abu Dhabi: Two Indian expatriates won the grand prize of 100,000 Dirhams (Rs 22,36,540) each in the Big Ticket Abu Dhabi weekly draw held on Friday, March 24.

    The winner of the draw Singaram Sivanadiyan and Rahul Geetha Menon— bagged the prize after matching five of the six winning numbers.

    Singaram Sivanadiyan, resident of Ajman, United Arab Emirates (UAE) from the past 20 years and works as a warehouse manager.

    Another winner, Rahul Geetha Menon, resident of Doha, Qatar, for the past seven years and works as a safety supervisor.

    After pooling his money with a group of 20 people, he said he wasn’t expecting to win.

    Sheniz Rahim from Mozambique also won 100,000 Dirhams in the weekly raffle draw.

    In the upcoming live draw in April, one customer will win 20 million Dirhams (Rs 44,98,40,200) via Big Ticket. In addition to the grand prize, for the first time this year, nine more winners will have the chance to win guaranteed cash prizes during the next live draw.

    Big Ticket customers will also be automatically entered into the weekly electronic draw and have a chance to be one of the three winners who win 100,000 Dirhams (Rs 22,48,784) each week.

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    #Indian #expats #home #lakh #UAEs #Big #Ticket #draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Haj 2023: HCI directs state committees to issue cover numbers by today, draw soon

    Haj 2023: HCI directs state committees to issue cover numbers by today, draw soon

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    Hyderabad: The Haj Committee of India has requested the state Haj committees to complete the scrutiny of applications received by each state for Haj 2023 and issue cover numbers by March 23 to help in the draw of lots.

    Chief Executive Officer Muhammad Yaqoob Sheikh has written a letter to the executive officers of all the states, stating that the deadline for submission of online application forms for Haj 2023 has ended. The concerned Haj committees should examine the applications and issue numbers. The draw of lots for the selection of Haj pilgrims across the country will be held soon, so the work of issuing cover numbers should be completed by March 23.

    A total of 8,663 applications have been received by the Talangana Haj Committee while it was expected that more than 10,000 applications would be received. It is said that as a result of the reduction of facilities for pilgrims by the Haj Committee, pilgrims are preferring private tour operators.

    In case of departure from the Haj Committee of India, the stay in Saudi Arabia has been reduced to 30 days and the procedure of providing 2100 Saudi Riyals to pilgrims from this year has also been abolished. Children under the age of 12 are not allowed to perform Hajj.

    Pilgrims from Telangana will also be deprived of Rubat facility this year. Discontinuing payment of 2100 riyals in the name of reducing expenses is likely to increase the personal expenses of pilgrims. In case of departure by the Hajj Committee, the total cost is expected to be up to Rs 350,000, so there is no special interest left in the departure of the pilgrims through the Hajj Committee.

    The pilgrims are of the view that the government should take steps to provide better facilities at its level. Pilgrims believe that on departure from the Hajj Committee, pilgrims have to arrange food on their own, while private tour operators not only arrange food but also provide accommodation in buildings near Haramain.

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    #Haj #HCI #directs #state #committees #issue #cover #numbers #today #draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Haj 2023: HCI directs state committees to issue cover numbers by today, draw soon

    Haj 2023: HCI directs state committees to issue cover numbers by today, draw soon

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: The Haj Committee of India has requested the state Haj committees to complete the scrutiny of applications received by each state for Haj 2023 and issue cover numbers by March 23 to help in the draw of lots.

    Chief Executive Officer Muhammad Yaqoob Sheikh has written a letter to the executive officers of all the states, stating that the deadline for submission of online application forms for Haj 2023 has ended. The concerned Haj committees should examine the applications and issue numbers. The draw of lots for the selection of Haj pilgrims across the country will be held soon, so the work of issuing cover numbers should be completed by March 23.

    A total of 8,663 applications have been received by the Talangana Haj Committee while it was expected that more than 10,000 applications would be received. It is said that as a result of the reduction of facilities for pilgrims by the Haj Committee, pilgrims are preferring private tour operators.

    In case of departure from the Haj Committee of India, the stay in Saudi Arabia has been reduced to 30 days and the procedure of providing 2100 Saudi Riyals to pilgrims from this year has also been abolished. Children under the age of 12 are not allowed to perform Hajj.

    Pilgrims from Telangana will also be deprived of Rubat facility this year. Discontinuing payment of 2100 riyals in the name of reducing expenses is likely to increase the personal expenses of pilgrims. In case of departure by the Hajj Committee, the total cost is expected to be up to Rs 350,000, so there is no special interest left in the departure of the pilgrims through the Hajj Committee.

    The pilgrims are of the view that the government should take steps to provide better facilities at its level. Pilgrims believe that on departure from the Hajj Committee, pilgrims have to arrange food on their own, while private tour operators not only arrange food but also provide accommodation in buildings near Haramain.

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    #Haj #HCI #directs #state #committees #issue #cover #numbers #today #draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UAE: 2 Indian expats take home Rs 22 lakh each in Big Ticket draw

    UAE: 2 Indian expats take home Rs 22 lakh each in Big Ticket draw

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    Abu Dhabi: Two United Arab Emirates (UAE) based Indian expatriates won the grand prize of 100,000 Dirhams (Rs 22,48,784) each in the Big Ticket Abu Dhabi weekly draw held on Friday, March 10.

    The winners of the draw Bijin Madhusoodanan Pillai Sivasankara Madhusoodanan Pillai and Vishal Rattanpal— bagged the prize after matching five of the six winning numbers.

    Bijin Madhusoodanan, who works as a driver at Abu Dhabi International Airport. He has been a resident of Abu Dhabi from the past 12 years and has been buying Big Tickets since 2015.

    The second winner— Vishal, resident of Dubai, works as an IT consultant.

    Vishal plans to use his winnings to clear his debt and will share the remaining amount with family and friends

    Rashmi Ahuja from New Zealanad also won 100,000 Dirhams in the weekly raffle draw.

    In the upcoming live draw in April, one customer will win 20 million Dirhams (Rs 44,98,40,200) via Big Ticket. In addition to the grand prize, for the first time this year, nine more winners will have the chance to win guaranteed cash prizes during the next live draw.

    Big Ticket customers will also be automatically entered into the weekly electronic draw and have a chance to be one of the three winners who win 100,000 Dirhams (Rs 22,48,784) each week.

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    #UAE #Indian #expats #home #lakh #Big #Ticket #draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Democrats draw ‘red line’ around Medicaid as GOP mulls cuts

    Democrats draw ‘red line’ around Medicaid as GOP mulls cuts

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    virus outbreak congress 44405

    “No one’s interested in doing anything other than saving it to make it more solvent for those that might need it down the road,” Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) told POLITICO. “If you want to save [Medicaid] for future generations, it’s never too early to look at how to do that.”

    Biden, who is expected to release his budget on Thursday, has spent much of the year castigating Republicans for proposals to cut Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act part of a broader effort to paint the GOP as a threat to popular health programs. Though Democrats, who control the Senate, will almost certainly reject big cuts to Medicaid, Republicans’ desire to rein in federal spending portends a drawn out political fight over a program that now insures more than one-in-four Americans.

    Republican House and Senate leadership have been adamant that they will not cut those two entitlement programs, but have said less about Medicaid, which insures more than 90 million Americans. That number swelled during the Covid-19 pandemic, when states were barred from removing people who were no longer eligible.

    Asked if assurances by GOP leaders that Medicare and Social Security are off the table have put more pressure on lawmakers to find savings in Medicaid, Rep. Michael Burgess (R-Texas) quipped: “It doesn’t take much imagination to figure that out.”

    Some Republicans want to revive a 2017 plan to phase out the enhanced federal match for Medicaid and cap spending for the program — an approach the Congressional Budget Office estimated would save $880 billion over 10 years and increase the number of uninsured people by 21 million.

    “If you remember back to the American Health Care Act, we proposed that we make some significant changes to Medicaid. I think you’re gonna find that some of those same ideas are going to be revisited,” said Rep. Buddy Carter (R-Ga.), a member of the House Budget Committee and the conservative Republican Study Committee, a group now working on its own budget proposal to pitch to GOP leadership.

    Carter added that there is also interest in the caucus in abolishing Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion, arguing that the majority of states that have opted to expand the program over the last decade might have “buyer’s remorse.”

    “Medicaid was always intended for the aged, blind and disabled — for the least in our society, who need help the most,” he said. “Trying to get back to that would probably be beneficial.”

    Carter and many other Republicans are also pushing for Medicaid work requirements, though the one state that implemented them saw thousands of people who should have qualified lose coverage.

    “For the people who are on traditional Medicaid — the pregnant, children and disabled — there’s no sense in talking about work requirements,” Burgess said. “But for the expansion population, able-bodied adults who were wrapped in under the Affordable Care Act, yeah, that has to be part of the discussion.”

    Other Republicans want to make narrower reforms. Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), who chairs the Energy and Commerce Committee’s Health Subcommittee, is looking at changes to value-based payments in Medicaid so that states aren’t “on the hook for treatments that don’t work.” Still others are weighing potential changes to areas within Medicaid, including provider taxes and how to handle coverage for people who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid.

    The GOP members are spurred on by outside conservative groups like the Paragon Institute, which has been holding monthly briefings for Capitol Hill aides and backchanneling with members.

    “If you look at what’s driving the debt, it’s federal health programs,” Brian Blase, the president of Paragon, who worked at the White House’s National Economic Council under the Trump administration, told POLITICO. “Either Congress will reform federal health programs or there will be a massive tax increase on the middle class.”

    Democrats, for their part, are working to make any proposal to cut Medicaid as politically risky for Republicans as threats to Medicare.

    “I worry that my Republican colleagues have, I guess, heard from the public about their desire to cut Social Security and Medicare [and] are looking elsewhere, and obviously poor people have very little representation in Congress, so that’s an easy target,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who chairs the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee.

    Democrats hoping to shield Medicaid in the upcoming budget negotiations are emphasizing how many red states have voted to expand the program since Republicans last took a run at it in 2017. They’re also stressing that the people covered by Medicaid aren’t solely low-income parents and children.

    “Right now at least 50 percent of Medicaid goes to seniors, and a lot of that is for nursing home care,” Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), the top Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Committee, told reporters. “People don’t realize that Medicaid is the ultimate payer for nursing home care once you run out of money or once your Medicare runs out.”

    In a speech in late February, President Joe Biden excoriated Republicans for pushing deep cuts to Medicaid, arguing that doing so would threaten the finances of rural hospitals that are barely able to keep their doors open today.

    “Many places throughout the Midwest, you have to drive 30, 40 miles to get to a hospital. By that time, you’re dead,” he said. “Entire communities depend on these hospitals. Not getting Medicaid would shut many of them down.”

    Two people familiar with White House plans tell POLITICO that Biden is expected to include a federal expansion of Medicaid in the remaining holdout states in the budget he will submit to Congress later this week.

    Adam Cancryn contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]
    #Democrats #draw #red #line #Medicaid #GOP #mulls #cuts
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Democrats draw ‘red line’ around Medicaid as GOP mulls cuts

    Democrats draw ‘red line’ around Medicaid as GOP mulls cuts

    [ad_1]

    virus outbreak congress 44405

    “No one’s interested in doing anything other than saving it to make it more solvent for those that might need it down the road,” Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) told POLITICO. “If you want to save [Medicaid] for future generations, it’s never too early to look at how to do that.”

    Biden, who is expected to release his budget on Thursday, has spent much of the year castigating Republicans for proposals to cut Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act part of a broader effort to paint the GOP as a threat to popular health programs. Though Democrats, who control the Senate, will almost certainly reject big cuts to Medicaid, Republicans’ desire to rein in federal spending portends a drawn out political fight over a program that now insures more than one-in-four Americans.

    Republican House and Senate leadership have been adamant that they will not cut those two entitlement programs, but have said less about Medicaid, which insures more than 90 million Americans. That number swelled during the Covid-19 pandemic, when states were barred from removing people who were no longer eligible.

    Asked if assurances by GOP leaders that Medicare and Social Security are off the table have put more pressure on lawmakers to find savings in Medicaid, Rep. Michael Burgess (R-Texas) quipped: “It doesn’t take much imagination to figure that out.”

    Some Republicans want to revive a 2017 plan to phase out the enhanced federal match for Medicaid and cap spending for the program — an approach the Congressional Budget Office estimated would save $880 billion over 10 years and increase the number of uninsured people by 21 million.

    “If you remember back to the American Health Care Act, we proposed that we make some significant changes to Medicaid. I think you’re gonna find that some of those same ideas are going to be revisited,” said Rep. Buddy Carter (R-Ga.), a member of the House Budget Committee and the conservative Republican Study Committee, a group now working on its own budget proposal to pitch to GOP leadership.

    Carter added that there is also interest in the caucus in abolishing Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion, arguing that the majority of states that have opted to expand the program over the last decade might have “buyer’s remorse.”

    “Medicaid was always intended for the aged, blind and disabled — for the least in our society, who need help the most,” he said. “Trying to get back to that would probably be beneficial.”

    Carter and many other Republicans are also pushing for Medicaid work requirements, though the one state that implemented them saw thousands of people who should have qualified lose coverage.

    “For the people who are on traditional Medicaid — the pregnant, children and disabled — there’s no sense in talking about work requirements,” Burgess said. “But for the expansion population, able-bodied adults who were wrapped in under the Affordable Care Act, yeah, that has to be part of the discussion.”

    Other Republicans want to make narrower reforms. Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), who chairs the Energy and Commerce Committee’s Health Subcommittee, is looking at changes to value-based payments in Medicaid so that states aren’t “on the hook for treatments that don’t work.” Still others are weighing potential changes to areas within Medicaid, including provider taxes and how to handle coverage for people who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid.

    The GOP members are spurred on by outside conservative groups like the Paragon Institute, which has been holding monthly briefings for Capitol Hill aides and backchanneling with members.

    “If you look at what’s driving the debt, it’s federal health programs,” Brian Blase, the president of Paragon, who worked at the White House’s National Economic Council under the Trump administration, told POLITICO. “Either Congress will reform federal health programs or there will be a massive tax increase on the middle class.”

    Democrats, for their part, are working to make any proposal to cut Medicaid as politically risky for Republicans as threats to Medicare.

    “I worry that my Republican colleagues have, I guess, heard from the public about their desire to cut Social Security and Medicare [and] are looking elsewhere, and obviously poor people have very little representation in Congress, so that’s an easy target,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who chairs the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee.

    Democrats hoping to shield Medicaid in the upcoming budget negotiations are emphasizing how many red states have voted to expand the program since Republicans last took a run at it in 2017. They’re also stressing that the people covered by Medicaid aren’t solely low-income parents and children.

    “Right now at least 50 percent of Medicaid goes to seniors, and a lot of that is for nursing home care,” Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), the top Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Committee, told reporters. “People don’t realize that Medicaid is the ultimate payer for nursing home care once you run out of money or once your Medicare runs out.”

    In a speech in late February, President Joe Biden excoriated Republicans for pushing deep cuts to Medicaid, arguing that doing so would threaten the finances of rural hospitals that are barely able to keep their doors open today.

    “Many places throughout the Midwest, you have to drive 30, 40 miles to get to a hospital. By that time, you’re dead,” he said. “Entire communities depend on these hospitals. Not getting Medicaid would shut many of them down.”

    Two people familiar with White House plans tell POLITICO that Biden is expected to include a federal expansion of Medicaid in the remaining holdout states in the budget he will submit to Congress later this week.

    Adam Cancryn contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]
    #Democrats #draw #red #line #Medicaid #GOP #mulls #cuts
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • UAE: Emirates Draw makes it easier to win Rs 222 crore; here’s how to participate

    UAE: Emirates Draw makes it easier to win Rs 222 crore; here’s how to participate

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    Emirates Draw, the UAE-based organisation, has announced a major change to its 100 million Dirhams (Rs 2,22,82,81,301) MEGA7 draw, the Middle East’s largest weekly draw.

    To simplify the process of winning, Emirates draw removed restrictions on orders or winning numbers. This means a participant can claim the jackpot by matching the seven digits in any order.

    New changes for the prizes

    • 7 Dirhams (Rs 155)— Match three out of seven numbers in any order
    • 50 Dirhams (Rs 1,113)— Match four out of seven numbers in any order
    • 1,000 Dirhams (Rs 22,264)— Match five out of seven numbers in any order
    • 250,000 Dirhams (Rs 55,67,097)— Match six out of seven numbers in any orders
    • 100 million Dirhams (Rs 2,22,82,81,301)— Match all seven numbers in any order

    Participation in the lottery has not changed. Players can participate by paying an entrance fee of 50 Dirhams and choosing their seven numbers from 37 compared to the previous 70, which makes the game more exciting.

    With the slogan ‘For a Better Tomorrow’, the draw has completed 18 months, and they have awarded more than 87 million Dirhams in cash prizes.

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    #UAE #Emirates #Draw #easier #win #crore #heres #participate

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Now UAE’s Mahzooz draw guarantees one millionaire every week

    Now UAE’s Mahzooz draw guarantees one millionaire every week

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    Abu Dhabi: Mahzooz, the United Arab Emirates’ leading weekly draw, which has consistently awarded huge prizes has announced big changes to its prize structure.

    Having more than 134 weekly live draws, 32 millionaires, and over 376 million Dirhams awarded to over 2,28,000 winners worldwide, Mahzooz offers bolder and better prizes to its ever-growing fan base, in line with its mission to change people’s lives.

    Starting from March 11, the weekly competition will ensure that a one Dirham millionaire (Rs 2,22,46,263) is crowned every week and the first prize will increase to 20 million Dirhams (Rs 44,49,25,270).

    Participations can register themselves at the official website and purchase bottled water for 35 Dirhams (Rs 778). With every purchase, customers get a chance to participate in a grant draw and raffle draw. 

    All you have to do is pick five of the 49 numbers to be in with a chance to enter the three prizes.

    • First prize of 20,000,000 Dirhams (Rs 44,49,25,270).
    • Second prize of 200,000 Dirhams (Rs 44,49,252)
    • Third prize of 250 Dirhams (Rs 5,561)

    The same tickets are automatically entered into the weekly raffle draw which will award a prize of 1,00,000 Dirhams (Rs 22,24,62)  per person. 



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    #UAEs #Mahzooz #draw #guarantees #millionaire #week

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Mahzooz draw: 40-yr-old Filipino in UAE becomes millionaire overnight

    Mahzooz draw: 40-yr-old Filipino in UAE becomes millionaire overnight

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    UAE: 40-yr-old Filipina expat becomes overnight millionaire after winning Mahzooz draw

    Abu Dhabi: A 40-year-old United Arab Emirates (UAE) based expat from the Philippines won the grand prize of 10 million Dirhams (Rs 22,46,37,576) at the recent Super Saturday Draws by Mahzooz.

    The winner of the draw Arlene— matched five out of the five winning numbers (9, 10, 13, 28, 29).

    Arlene, an independent sales promoter, has been involved with Mahzooz for more than a year, and consistently buys one ticket each week, choosing the same group that has significance in her life.

    Also Read

    Dubai International Boat Show 2023 opens on Mar 1

    “I have not been able to sleep for two days after hearing my husband tell me about the email I got from Mahzooz informing me of my win. I only had Dh 17 in my bank account and my husband went out and deposited an additional Dh20 into my account so that I could purchase the last week’s bottle of water for Dh 35,” Arlene told Gulf News.

    Arlene and her husband plan to use the windfall of Dirhams 10 million, which she describes as a welcome gift from God, to buy land and build a house in the Philippines.

    Filipinos come second in both participation and winners in Mahzooz, with around 50,000 winners taking around Dirhams 62,000,000 (1,39,24,17,052) in total prizes over the past two years.

    Entrants can participate in Mahzooz by registering via the Mahzooz website and purchasing a bottle of water for Dirhams 35 (Rs 789), which enables them to enter multiple draws – the epic Friday Super Draw and the Super Saturday Draw – by selecting two different sets of numbers.

    View this post on Instagram

    A post shared by Mahzooz (@mymahzooz)


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    #Mahzooz #draw #40yrold #Filipino #UAE #millionaire #overnight

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Glass igloos draw huge rush in Gulmarg

    Glass igloos draw huge rush in Gulmarg

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    Jahangeer Ganaie

    Srinagar, Feb 24: Glass Igloos in the middle of snow Gulmarg has become a major attraction for visitors.

    The glass igloos made by Kolahoi Green Heights hotel of Gulmarg are being visited by hundreds of locals and tourists every day. They enjoy lunch, tea and love to take selfies.

    Ishfaq Ahmad, an assistant Manager at the hotel told news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that they had made snow igloos in the last two years but it was taking time in making it but this year snowfall was late and there wasn’t so much left to make snow igloo.

    “We are always trying to bring new concepts to Gulmarg to promote winter tourism, and this year we have launched an igloo glass concept for a restaurant that is a major tourist attraction currently,“ he said.

    “We have kept three igloos in the first phase and three in premises of the hotel. There is positive response and this will remain available throughout the year,” Ishfaq said.

    Celebrations, candle light dinners and other things were not possible in hotels but igloos are being booked continuously for candle light dinner and other celebrations purposes as well, he said.

    Ishfaq said that it is the concept of Finland and first time in Asia and has kept heating arrangements as well.

    It is a completely different experience sitting in an igloo.

    Even the guests who have in house bookings also want to spend some time in these igloos to have lunch, dinner or tea, he said.

    An igloo can have six guests at a time and guests are given around a minimum one hour to enjoy and these igloos are pre-booked, he said.

    He said that Syed Waseem Shah is behind the concept and creation of these Igloos.

    Mostly domestic tourists are booking these igloos to have a unique experience, he said—(KNO)

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    #Glass #igloos #draw #huge #rush #Gulmarg

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )