Tag: fellow

  • Braverman’s comments on boat arrivals’ values rejected by fellow Tories

    Braverman’s comments on boat arrivals’ values rejected by fellow Tories

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    Suella Braverman is facing further criticism from Conservative colleagues including the “red wall” MP Jonathan Gullis over claims that people crossing the Channel have values at odds with the UK’s.

    It comes as the home secretary’s allegations that Albanian people arriving in the UK by small boats are exploiting modern slavery laws have been challenged in an analysis seen by the Guardian.

    Asked about the home secretary’s comments on the values of people crossing on small boats, the Stoke MP said they made him feel “uncomfortable”.

    Gullis, who previously suggested it would be “acceptable” to house migrants in tents, told LBC: “I don’t feel comfortable with the mentioning of the values. I don’t think that was appropriate, nor was it right.”

    Braverman on Wednesday said people who come to the UK across the Channel in small boats “possess values which are at odds with our country” and there were “heightened levels of criminality”. She told the Guardian her claims were based on briefings from unnamed senior police officers, not data.

    The Conservative peer Sayeeda Warsi said Braverman should be replaced and the government needed a home secretary who would re-establish “evidence-based policies”.

    “Part of what, unfortunately, the home secretary has a tendency to do is to make sweeping statements based upon nothing,” Lady Warsi told Channel 4. “I think she has to go back to having a sense of proportionality, a commitment to facts, making policy based upon evidence.”

    Braverman’s allegations that many Albanians claiming to be victims of modern slavery were lying have been challenged by the Migration Observatory at Oxford University (OMO).

    It found that just 12% of Albanians who came across the Channel in 2022 were referred to the national referral mechanism (NRM), which is designed to provide victims with safety and support.

    Of the Albanians whose cases were assessed, 90% were found by the Home Office to have “reasonable grounds” for claiming to be victims of modern slavery, the body has discovered.

    Braverman told Conservative party members in October: “Today, the largest group of small boats migrants are from Albania, a safe country. Many of them claim to be trafficked as modern slaves. The truth is that many of them are not modern slaves and their claims of being trafficked are lies.”

    The OMO analysis found that of the roughly 12,000 Albanians who arrived via small boats in 2022, 1,467 (12%) were referred to the NRM by the end of 2022. Among all small boat arrivals in 2022, 7% were referred to the NRM.

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    “Of the 1,467 Albanians who arrived via small boat and were referred to the NRM in 2022, 1,382 (94%) had received by 2023 a decision from the Home Office on whether there are ‘reasonable grounds’ to believe the individual is a victim of modern slavery. Of these, the Home Office determined that in 90% (1,239) of cases there were reasonable grounds to believe these individuals were modern slavery victims,” the analysis said.

    The figures also contrast with Rishi Sunak’s claims in December that “one of the reasons we struggle to remove [Albanian] people is because they unfairly exploit our modern slavery system”.

    The government’s asylum law, the illegal migration bill, was voted through the House of Commons on Wednesday. The former prime minister Theresa May led criticism of the bill for abandoning people who have been trafficked or forced into slavery.

    Labour has attacked Braverman for failing to provide hard evidence for incendiary comments about refugees. Stephen Kinnock, the shadow immigration minister, said: “The Conservative government is consistently misrepresenting asylum statistics and giving the public a misleading view of the reality of what we face in fixing the broken asylum system.”

    A Home Office spokesperson said the UK government valued the Albanian community in the UK and welcomed those who come to the UK legally.

    “Modern slavery remains a barbaric crime which the government is committed to stamping out and we continue to support thousands of genuine victims every year, but we will not allow people to abuse our laws,” the spokesperson said. “The illegal migration bill will change the law so that if someone is identified as a potential victim of modern slavery or human trafficking, we will ensure they are safely returned home or to another safe country.”

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    #Bravermans #comments #boat #arrivals #values #rejected #fellow #Tories
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Waheed Para Is Yale University Peace Fellow 2023

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    SRINAGAR: Waheed Ur Rehman Para, a young leader from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has been named the inaugural Yale Peace Fellow at Yale’s International Leadership Center.

    This fellowship provides an intensive program that includes research, mentoring, and training for emerging leaders in the field of peace, as well as participation in high-level events focused on conflict resolution and peace strategies.

    The goal of the Peace Fellowship is to strengthen the capacity of the next generation of peacemakers and mediators, learn from experiences in peace building, and establish global partnerships.

    The International Leadership Center at Yale, which is part of the Jackson School of Global Affairs, is also home to other prestigious programs such as the Maurice R. Greenberg World Fellows Program, the Petraeus-Recanati-Kaplan (PRK) Fellowship, and Emerging Climate Leaders Fellowship. Inter Mediate; a prominent peacemaking organization that works to end armed conflicts will collaborate with the Peace Fellowship, which will be managed by CEO Jonathan Powell, the former lead British negotiator for the Good Friday Agreement.

    Mehbooba Mufti, the former Chief Minister of J&K and leader of PDP, expressed her congratulations to Waheed Para via Facebook. She stated, “Congratulations to Waheed Para, President @YouthJKPDP, on being named the first Yale Peace Fellow at Yale University. His exceptional contributions to the advancement of democracy and peace in Kashmir are highly commendable. I wish him all the best.”



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    #Waheed #Para #Yale #University #Peace #Fellow

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • McCarthy’s pitch to shrink food aid drawing skepticism from fellow Republicans

    McCarthy’s pitch to shrink food aid drawing skepticism from fellow Republicans

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    While praising the intent behind the House GOP efforts to expand work requirements for SNAP, which used to be known as food stamps, top Republican senators have sought to temper expectations about the proposal’s prospects in the upper chamber.

    “I’m sure it won’t be easy,” said John Thune (S.D.), the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, noting his party will get a second bite at the apple later this year during the farm bill reauthorization process.

    A GOP Senate aide, who was granted anonymity to discuss private conversations, was less diplomatic: “I mean, Godspeed. Get what you can. We’re going to live in reality over here.”

    Senate Republicans have been voicing similar skepticism since House Republicans began privately pitching new proposals to rein in SNAP last year, after they won back the chamber in November.

    Asked about the prospects for such measures in the next Congress, Sen. John Boozman (Ark.) the top Republican on the Agriculture Committee, which oversees SNAP, said in an interview a week after the 2022 midterms that the effort “would be difficult to pass in the Senate with 60 votes,” a nod to the threshold needed to overcome a Senate filibuster.

    And, given the GOP’s unexpectedly slim majority in the House, there’s no guarantee such controversial proposals could even get out of the lower chamber, Boozman pointed out. “You look at the margin in the House,” he said, “It might be difficult to pass it in the House.”

    McCarthy and his team are now confronting that reality as they try to hold together their own caucus vis-a-vis the debt ceiling negotiations with the White House. McCarthy, Graves and other top House Republicans have briefed most of the caucus on their plans in a series of calls that stretched into the weekend. So far, leaders have avoided key defections by staying away from too much detail — for example, they have yet to outline a specific plan to close the so-called “loopholes” in the existing SNAP work requirements, which Republicans complain primarily blue states are using to waive some work requirements. Taking a tough line would please the most conservative GOP members, but alienate Republicans from swing districts, and vice versa.

    Already, the talk of shrinking SNAP, which currently serves 41 million low-income Americans, is raising pressure on many Republicans that represent districts President Joe Biden won in 2020. Several of those members have raised internal concerns, especially about proposals from their colleagues that would add work requirements for some low-income parents who have children under 18 living at home, according to two other people involved in those conversations, who asked for anonymity to discuss internal caucus matters. A handful of GOP freshmen from New York, one of the states that consistently asks the federal government to waive some work requirements for SNAP recipients, are in an especially tricky spot. Constituents have begun pressing them to oppose efforts that would further restrict SNAP and other key assistance following the loss of key pandemic-era aid — which Biden administration officials argue helped keep the country from falling into a deeper hunger crisis in the wake of Covid-19.

    At a farm bill listening session in Rep. Marc Molinaro’s (R-N.Y.) upstate district last Friday, local farmers, food bank operators and anti-hunger advocates urged lawmakers to defend and even expand current SNAP programs.

    One state administrator called for “easing burdensome and complicated work and reporting requirements” to provide better access to the program, as the administration’s pandemic-era pause on certain SNAP work requirements is set to end in July. A food bank operator warned of a looming “hunger cliff” in the country as families continue to reel from the fallout of Covid-19. She urged members of Congress “not make decisions on the back of the most vulnerable people.”

    Eric Ooms, vice president of the New York branch of the American Farm Bureau Federation, the nation’s leading agricultural lobby, told the lawmakers who attended the listening session not to think of SNAP as a “city thing,” noting that the program is a key lifeline to low-income Americans in rural areas where food insecurity “is higher than it’s ever been.”

    Molinaro, who says his family relied on food stamps during his childhood, has indicated general support for some SNAP reforms, saying he understands the “inefficiencies” of the program through his experience as a former county executive charged with overseeing it. But he has declined to say if he would support the proposals to expand work requirements that his colleagues have been pushing for months.

    In his closing remarks on Friday, Molinaro sounded a note of support for SNAP but indicated only the most needy should get aid — an argument Republicans have used in their campaign to reduce the size of the program.

    “Yes, those that struggle the hardest need to know that they have the support, not only of SNAP, but of other wrap-around services,” he said.

    Derrick Van Orden, a Trump-aligned Republican who represents a swing district in Wisconsin, spoke during the listening session of his family’s struggle with poverty and reliance on food stamps when he was a child. While he acknowledges some flaws in the current system, he said, “I’m a member of Congress because of these programs.”

    “There’s a lot of people who have not gone to bed hungry at night, and I have. And there’s no place for that in America,” Van Orden said.

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    #McCarthys #pitch #shrink #food #aid #drawing #skepticism #fellow #Republicans
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Central University Jammu Interview for a post of Junior Research Fellow (JRF) & Application form

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    Central University Jammu Interview for a post of Junior Research Fellow (JRF) & Application form

    Eligible candidates are invited for walkin interview for a post of Junior Research Fellow (JRF),to work in the Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), New Delhi sponsored major research project ref. CRG/2022/002384, to be held on 24 th March 2023 at 11:00 AM at Department of Physics and Astronomical Sciences, Central University of Jammu, Rahya-Suchani (Bagla)

    Name of the Temporary Post : Junior Research Fellow (JRF)

    Number of Post : One (01)

    Name of the Research Project : A Comprehensive study of nuclear structure properties of oddmass nuclei in transitional region

    Name of the Sponsoring Agency : SERB, New Delhi

    Tenure of the Project : 03 Years

    Consolidated monthly compensation / Fellowship : : Rs. 31,000 + 9% HRA

    Essential Qualifications and experience: Master’s degree in Physics , NET/GATE

    Candidates are required to bring filled application in the prescribed format (given below), detailed CV with recent photograph.

    Dated: 22-3-23

    For Application Form click link below:

    Walk-in Interview for a post of Junior Research Fellow (JRF) in Department of Physics.



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    #Central #University #Jammu #Interview #post #Junior #Research #Fellow #JRF #Application #form

    ( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • Cluster University Of Jammu Notification for the position of Junior Research Fellow (JRF)

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    Cluster University Of Jammu Notification for the position of Junior Research Fellow (JRF)

    Annexure -A

    Applications are invited for one post of Junior Research Fellow in DST/SERB, New Delhi sponsored project “Copper Chelation Therapy for Copper overload Diseases – A Systematic Model Study” under Dr. Biplab Kumar Malti (P.I), Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, School of Sciences, Cluster University of Jammu (CLUJ). The project is for three years, and the post is coterminous with the project. For details visit CLUJ website atwww.clujammu.in No. CLUJ/Adm/23/786

    Annexure -B

    Applications are invited for one post of Junior Research Fellow in DST/SERB, New Delhi sponsored project “Computational Investigation on Origin of Stereodivergence in Stereodivergent Cooperative Catalysis” under Dr. Avtar Changotra (P.I), Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, School of
    Sciences, Cluster University of Jammu (CLUJ). The project is for three years, and the post is coterminous with the project. For details visit CLUJ website at
    www.clujammu.in

    No. CLUJ/Adm/23/787

    Further Details : 

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    #Cluster #University #Jammu #Notification #position #Junior #Research #Fellow #JRF

    ( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • Central University Jammu Advertisement for the post of Junior Research Fellow

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    Central University Jammu Advertisement for the post of Junior Research Fellow

    Applications are invited for a JRF position on prescribed format for the following assignment in a time bound research project sponsored by ICMR at the Centre for Molecular Biology, Central University of Jammu, Rahya Suchani (Bagla), DistrictSamba181143, J&K.

    Name of the Post : Junior Research Fellow (JRF)
    Number of Post : One (01)
    Title of the Project : To Investigate the protective role of Extracellular Vesicles derived from Probiotic strain of Lactobacilli against atopic dermatitis and acne vulgaris.
    Tenure of the Assignment : One year (initially), extendable up to three years (or till the completion of this project whichever is earlier) subject to satisfactory performance
    Name of the Sponsoring Agency: : Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), New Delhi
    Essential Qualification: M.Sc. degree in Molecular Biology/Biotechnology/ Microbiology /Biochemistry and Life Sciences or other relevant subjects from a recognized University/ Institution with minimum 55% Marks in aggregate or equivalent CGPA.
    Desirable Qualifications: Students with Valid NET / GATE / JRF (CSIR / UGC/ DBT /ICMR) or any other equivalent examination will be given.

    Experiences: preference. Knowledge of Microbiology, Molecular biology, protein purification, cell culture and handling of mice for in vivo study is desirable.
    Monthly Fellowship : Rs. 31,000.0 + HRA as per funding agency/University norms and third year Rs. 35,000/ per month +HRA
    Accommodation : Bachelor accommodation in the Institute may be provided subject to availability
    Terms : The services of the selected candidate will be as per ICMR guidelines. The project fellowship is a fulltime position. The selected candidate shall not draw money from any other source.
    PhD Opportunity (for NET/ GATE qualified): Selected candidate for JRF position will have the opportunity to
    register for a regular Ph.D. program in CU Jammu provided JRF satisfies the eligibility criteria for the same.

    CV, Marksheets, Degree certificates, NET/ GATE score cardif applicable and any other relevant documents) as a single PDF file through email to akyadav@cujammu.ac.in on or before 5th March 2023.

    Dated: 21-2-23

    For Application form for the JRF positions click link below:

    Advertisement for the post of Junior Research Fellow in Centre for Molecular Biology



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    #Central #University #Jammu #Advertisement #post #Junior #Research #Fellow

    ( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • Kashmir Neuroscientist Is Prestigious Sloan Research Fellow, Bags US $75K Fellowship

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    by Tahir Bhat

    SRINAGAR: Kashmir neuroscientist, Dr Mubarak Hussain Syed, is among the 125 scientists from USA and Canada who were declared prestigious Sloan Research Fellows for 2023. Every one of them receives US $75000 to pursue their research within two years.

    Dr Mubarak Hussain Syed is an assistant professor of Biology at The University of New Mexico and runs his own laboratory that has already helped solve certain mysteries of mind works in fruit flies.

    The Alfred P Sloan Foundation announced 126 early-career scholars recently. These 126 scientists “represent the most promising scientific researchers working today” and their “achievements and potential place them among the next generation of scientific leaders in the US and Canada,” the Foundation statement reads.

    The Fellowships are aimed at seeking to stimulate fundamental research by early-career scientists and scholars of outstanding promise. These are given in “recognition of distinguished performance and a unique potential to make substantial contributions to their field”.

    “The fellowships are presented to researchers whose creativity, innovation, and research accomplishments make them stand out,” a statement issued by the University said, insisting the fellowship is “one of the most competitive and prestigious awards available to early-career researchers”. It added: “They are also often seen as a marker of the quality of an institution’s science faculty and proof of an institution’s success in attracting the most promising junior researchers to its ranks.”

    I am humbled and honoured; it feels good to see your peers recognize your work and trust your capabilities, which also adds many responsibilities.,” Syed told TheNewsCaravan. “Early in my independent scientific career, this recognition will tremendously help our research programme and mentoring activities. I am grateful to my dedicated and hardworking team at the University of New Mexico, especially my first two graduate students, who also happen to be from Kashmir. Thanks to my family, friends, and mentors who have supported me and mentored me to be a better person. Special thanks to the dedicated and hardworking team at JKScientists, who are doing transformative work to train and mentor the next-generation Kashmiri students.”

    Asked where the new resources will be utilised, Dr Syed said the funds will be used to investigate fruit fly brain development. “Our research focuses on how neural stem cells generate central complex neurons,” he said. “The central complex is a conserved brain region among insects involved in many complex behaviours, including navigation and sleep. We will also use these funds to get pizzas for the students and trainees we mentor in Neural Diversity Lab.”

    Neural Diversity Lab University of New
    In the Neural Diversity Lab of the University of New Mexico, Dr Mubarak Hussain Syed (extreme right) with his scholars. KL Image: Special Arrangement

    “This award will help our team decipher the mysteries of fruit fly brain development, which will advance our understanding on unravelling fundamental principles underlying brain development and function across species,” Arash Mafi, University interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, was quoted as having said. “Our research will shed light on the development of the central complex, the brain region used for the celestial navigation of ants, flies, bees, and butterflies.”

    Syed heads the University’s Neural Diversity Lab investigates the genetic and molecular mechanisms regulating neural diversity – from stem cells to neural circuits. “The findings will help uncover the fundamental principles of nervous system development and potentially to understand and treat neuro-developmental disorders such as epilepsy, schizophrenia, ADHD, and autism,” the university said. Right now, the laboratory is investigating how neural stem cells specify neuron types essential for olfactory navigation and sleep behaviours.

    Fruit flies, it may be recalled here, offer an excellent model system to understand the genetic basis of nervous system development and function. Syed has been working with fruit flies for over a decade and is known as the “Fly Guy.”

    Already, the laboratory has identified a novel role of insect growth hormone in regulating neural stem cell temporal gene expression. Now they are testing if this hormonal signalling regulates the formation of diverse neuron types in the fruit fly brain.

    While Syed has emerged as perhaps the first Kashmir scientist to get the prestigious fellowship, this is not the first competitive award he has got. In 2021, he was awarded the National Science Foundation CAREER award.

    Dr Syed is also the founder of JK Scientists, a registered organisation that helps young scholars to navigate their career paths. Asked what his advice to aspiring scientists would be, he said: “Follow your passion; life is full of failures, but people only highlight success stories. I have failed most of the time and fail every day; persistence and consistency is the key. Value quality over quantity, and there are no shortcuts to achieving quality. I hope that in our region, talent gets recognition and the system starts nurturing early career scientists/scholars someday. Unfortunately, the current hiring system is losing quality researchers and future leaders. Stay motivated and hopeful, be kind and generous, and seek mentorship at your educational institution, JKScientists, or both. Inshallah, many among you will do better than me.”

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    #Kashmir #Neuroscientist #Prestigious #Sloan #Research #Fellow #Bags #75K #Fellowship

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Dr Salim Khan Of GMC Srinagar Conferred IAPSM Fellow

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    SRINAGAR:  Dr S Muhammad Salim Khan, professor and head, Department of Community Medicine (SPM), Government Medical College Srinagar has been conferred as a fellow of Indian Association of Preventive and Social Medicine (IAPSM) at ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad.

    He was felicitated during golden jubilee annual national conference of IAPSM organised by Department of Community and Family Medicine, AIIMS, Bibinagar, Hyderabad. The fellowship was conferred during the inaugural function by the chief guest, Dr. Tamilisai Soundararajan, Governor of Telangana and Lieutenant Governor of Puducherry to Dr. Muhammad Salim Khan to signify the recognition of his outstanding contribution in advancement of preventive and social medicine.

    Dr Khan is also a fellow of the Indian Public Health Association (IPHA), Indian Medical Association – Academy of Medical Specialties (IMA-AMS), fellow of the ‘foundation for advancement of international medical education and research’ (FAIMER). He’s a member of over two dozen national and international professional associations and societies, and also a member of various committees constituted by the government.

    During the IAPSMCON Hyderabad, Dr. Salim who was also the member of the national organising committee, chaired the inaugural plenary session on neglected tropical diseases. He was also declared elected as a member of the national governing council of IAPSM representing the north zone during 2023-24.

    During the valedictory of IAPSMCON 2023, the delegation team of GMC Srinagar was felicitated with a special award for highest number of delegates from any institution in the country. The fifteen delegates from GMC Srinagar presented their research work through oral and poster presentations. During the general body meeting of the IAPSM conference, GMC Srinagar was selected to hold the annual national conference of IAPSM in 2025.

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    #Salim #Khan #GMC #Srinagar #Conferred #IAPSM #Fellow

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Watch Video: 4 girl students booked for allegedly torturing fellow student on drugs issue at top private school in Lahore – Kashmir News

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    Watch Video: 4 girl students booked for allegedly torturing fellow student on drugs issue at top private school in Lahore – Kashmir News

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    #Watch #Video #girl #students #booked #allegedly #torturing #fellow #student #drugs #issue #top #private #school #Lahore #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )