Tag: finds

  • Biden finds his limits on Israel

    Biden finds his limits on Israel

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    Over the weekend, Netanyahu fired his defense minister for opposing the overhaul — sparking more protests and exposing cracks in the ruling coalition. On Monday, as more coalition members reportedly threatened to quit, Netanyahu announced he was putting the overhaul on hold and would seek a compromise measure.

    Throughout the crisis, whose roots stretch back months, President Joe Biden and his aides tried to strike a balance with Israel: Keeping appeals and criticisms largely private, but going public on occasion with carefully worded statements designed to pressure Netanyahu to back off the overhaul plan. But those U.S. appeals didn’t seem to do the trick. Internal Israeli pressure has clearly been far more powerful.

    The big question now is how much influence the United States still has with Netanyahu and what level of pressure it’s willing to apply when Netanyahu or his party take future destabilizing actions.

    So the crisis is all about the judicial reform?

    No. Netanyahu returned to power late last year— after the latest in a series of seemingly endless elections — by aligning himself with extreme right-wing figures, some of whom have racist, misogynist and homophobic views.

    This has alarmed more moderate and left-leaning Israelis, whose political power is limited. Many worry that the far-right coalition now in charge of the country — some members of whom have extreme religious views — will undermine secular Israelis’ rights, not to mention those of Israeli Arabs, Palestinians and others.

    To top it off, many of his critics suspect that the main reason Netanyahu is pushing the judicial overhaul and other initiatives desired by his far-right partners is so that they will ultimately protect him from prosecution in Israeli courts, where he’s facing corruption charges.

    How are Biden and his aides reacting to all this?

    Very, very cautiously.

    For the most part, Biden administration officials have tried to keep their conversations with the Israelis private, and, even then, they tend to say things in carefully worded ways.

    The administration has — often in a coded manner — warned Netanyahu that he needs to protect Israeli democracy. The administration also has stressed its support for LGBTQ rights and Palestinian rights in ways designed to signal to Netanyahu that he should rein in his extremist allies.

    Administration officials have said they will hold Netanyahu responsible for his coalition, pointing out that he’s insisted he’s the one in charge. And top administration officials have refused to meet with far-right figures surrounding the Israeli prime minister.

    But the Biden administration also insists that its commitment to Israel’s security is ironclad. The president has long said he will not impose conditions on the billions of dollars in security aid the U.S. provides to Israel, and there’s no sign he’s changed his mind about that.

    While the administration insists that it does have some leverage over Israel — such as assisting it against attacks at the United Nations or helping it pursue deeper cooperation with some Arab states — the reality is that it has largely stuck to rhetoric as its main weapon.

    Is it working?

    Not really.

    Just days ago, Biden spoke to Netanyahu, and the White House readout of the call emphasized that Biden wanted Israel to find a compromise on the judicial reform issue because it’s critical to safeguarding Israeli democracy.

    “Democratic societies are strengthened by genuine checks and balances, and that fundamental changes should be pursued with the broadest possible base of popular support,” the readout said.

    It was an unusually frank call, the readout suggested, especially given the usual niceties involved in the relationship. But in the days after, there was no sign that Netanyahu had taken Biden’s warnings to heart.

    The Israeli leader proceeded ahead with the judicial reform plans. It wasn’t until Netanyahu’s coalition started to crack amid popular pressure that he began to rethink his stance this past weekend.

    What factors must Biden consider when dealing with Israel?

    First, there’s the pure national security aspect. Israel is a critical partner to the United States in the Middle East, especially when it comes to intelligence sharing about the various players in the region.

    This is especially important in regard to Iran, a longtime U.S. and Israeli adversary with a nuclear program.

    Second, there’s just a lot of history. The United States has always been a stalwart partner to Israel ever since it was created as a homeland for the Jewish people fleeing persecution in Europe and beyond.

    Biden has been, for decades, a champion of Israel. He genuinely loves the country and the many successes it has achieved in its short existence.

    Biden has often touted his friendship with Netanyahu, even when the latter has tested that friendship.

    Israel also is a rare democracy in the Middle East. Many U.S. officials also want to keep good ties with Israel in part to resolve the lingering Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which has left the Palestinian people in misery for decades.

    Third, there’s the question of how things could play out in America’s 2024 presidential campaign.

    For many years, there was broad bipartisan support for Israel in the United States, and any president who criticized the country risked being attacked by members of his own party. This is changing, somewhat.

    Generally speaking, Democrats are still strong supporters of Israel. But there has been growing worry in recent years among Democrats about Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians.

    Netanyahu’s wholehearted embrace of former President Donald Trump angered many Democrats. His new government’s make-up also has alarmed even some of his strongest Democratic backers, suggesting Biden could feel pressure from his party to be tougher on Israel going forward.

    Is the calculus different for the GOP?

    Pro-Israel organizations are strong and politically active, and they command significant support from evangelical Christians in particular — an important Republican base.

    In a sign of how strident the GOP support is for Israel, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell recently told Axios that Washington shouldn’t weigh in on the judicial overhaul plan, calling it an Israel internal matter.

    Republicans eyeing the White House already are trying to prove their pro-Israel bona fides.

    Some, such as former Trump administration Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, won’t say if they support a future state for Palestinians, for instance. Nikki Haley, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, has touted her many efforts to protect Israel at the world body.

    But there are signs that Netanyahu’s overhaul plan goes too far for even some of Israel’s biggest supporters on the American right. Former Trump administration ambassador to Israel, David Friedman, is among those who’ve reportedly voiced concerns.

    How much does the U.S. really care about the Middle East right now, given threats from Russia and China?

    It still cares a lot.

    The United States has military bases in the Middle East, and the region remains a key source of oil and gas for the world — one even more critical given the damage Russia’s war in Ukraine has done to energy markets.

    Without question, the Biden administration believes the top threat to America’s long-term global power is China. But China — as well as Russia — is trying to gain influence in the Middle East amid perceptions that the United States is backing away from the region. That means the competition with those two countries will include the arena of the Middle East.

    For the Biden administration, one key goal is to push for a more peaceful Middle East, with the idea that a more stable Middle East means the United States can focus more on the grander challenges posed by China and Russia.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • TikTok hires Biden-connected firm as it finds itself under D.C.’s microscope

    TikTok hires Biden-connected firm as it finds itself under D.C.’s microscope

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    The fire TikTok has faced in D.C. has been building for a number of years after the Trump administration tried to ban the app. It has continued with the Biden administration’s Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. conducting a national security review of TikTok.

    SKDK is seen as the most well-connected Democratic firm in Washington with former top employees in senior and mid-level roles in the Biden administration. Anita Dunn, a founding partner, returned to the White House last May where she is senior adviser after a stint in the early part of the Biden administration and work on the 2020 campaign. Other former SKDK employees in the Biden administration include deputy White House communications directors Kate Berner and Herbie Ziskend, deputy Pentagon press secretary Sabrina Singh and Interior Department press secretary Tyler Cherry.

    While it has thrived in the Biden era, SKDK has also faced additional scrutiny for its clients. It parted ways with Starbucks last year as the coffee company tried to fend off a union organizing effort. As of 2021, the firm worked for Amazon as well but it’s unclear whether the two companies still have a relationship.

    Last year, Dunn said in financial disclosure documents that she had advised a number of blue-chip American companies in the previous two years who have business before the government, including AT&T, Lyft, Pfizer and Salesforce. The firm, which is owned by the Stagwell Group, has long emphasized that it doesn’t lobby the federal government or represent companies on issues before the government.

    The bill introduced by a bipartisan group of senators that could affect TikTok is supported by the White House. It would give the federal government new powers to restrict, and potentially ban, technologies from China and other nations designated as U.S. adversaries, although such an action would face howls from advocates of free speech. TikTok is seen as one of the technologies that is helping prompt that action from Congress given the worries that the Chinese government could one day use data from its millions of American users.

    To try to mitigate federal government action against TikTok, the app’s Chinese owner ByteDance has spent more than $13 million on lobbying since 2019 and has hired several dozen lobbyists, including former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) and John Breaux Sr. (R-La.), who work for Crossroads Strategies, as well as former Reps. Jeff Denham (R-Calif.) and Bart Gordon (D-Tenn.), who currently work for K&L Gates.

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    #TikTok #hires #Bidenconnected #firm #finds #D.C.s #microscope
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Louisville Police Department practices violated Constitution, DOJ finds

    Louisville Police Department practices violated Constitution, DOJ finds

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    The Louisville, Kentucky, city government and police department conducted practices that violated the Constitution, according to a new investigation released Wednesday by the Department of Justice.

    The Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government and the Louisville Metro Police Department had patterns of unlawful practices, Attorney General Merrick Garland said during a press conference in Louisville on Wednesday. The DOJ investigation, the results of which Garland announced Wednesday, was launched after Louisville police officers shot and killed Breonna Taylor in 2020. That shooting sparked nationwide protests and calls for police reform.

    In its report, the DOJ had “reasonable cause to believe” that the city government and police department engaged in “a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives people of their rights under the Constitution and federal law.”

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    #Louisville #Police #Department #practices #violated #Constitution #DOJ #finds
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Kashmir’s traditional rice cleaner—Shupp finds no takers

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    Jahangeer Ganaie

    Srinagar, Mar 08: The demand for traditional Winnower popularly known as ‘Shupp’ is on decline due to which winnower makers are struggling to make two ends meet.

    The Winnower makers in Kashmir claimed that they are going through difficult times as they are finding it very difficult to sell their pieces.

    Muhammad Ramzan Sheikh, a resident of Padgampora Awantipora in South Kashmir’s Pulwama district said that he has been associated with this art since the last three decades but this is the most difficult time for them as no there are no customers for the items.

    Earlier, there was good demand for the shupp but with advancement and new technologies, the demand for Kashmiri traditional shupp has declined and there is no demand for it any more, he said.

    “Every year we used to sell thousands of winnowers but we are making just a few pieces and have to go from village to village to sell these pieces,” he said. “A winnower maker was earning his livelihood very well as earlier winnowers were being used to separate grains from husk, cleaning rice and other things but with new technologies in market, machines have been doing this work and winnowers are hardly used anymore,” he said.

    He said that at present a winnower maker spends hundreds of rupees to make a Shupp but there are hardly any takers.

    Ab Rehman Sheikh, another winnower maker from Awantipora, said that he has spent days together in different villages to find customers but nobody is ready to take them as people hardly need winnower anywhere now.

    “We have even taken loans but due to decline in demand, we are unable to pay loan installments,” they said. “Earlier, we were earning our livelihood very well but now a person hardly earns Rs 100 on daily basis on which making both ends meet is very difficult.”

    He said that they have spent their entire life while making shupp and can’t do anything else now that is why they are still associated with the art even as the art is dying slowly.

    They said hundreds of households in Awantipora area were associated with winnower making but due to low demand, there number has reduced to just 20-25 now—(KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Gujarat: Police defend public flogging of Muslims; report finds six cops at fault

    Gujarat: Police defend public flogging of Muslims; report finds six cops at fault

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    Ahmedabad: Police have defended in the Gujarat High Court the public flogging of some people from a minority community following stone pelting in the state’s Kheda district last year saying the persons were “cornered” to maintain peace and it was not done with any criminal intent.

    This defence comes even as an interim police report talks of action against six cops in connection with the incident.

    Kheda Superintendent of Police R H Gadhiya and Police Inspector of Local Crime Branch, A V Parmar, filed separate affidavits before the bench of Justices N V Anjaria and Niral Mehta on Tuesday in a contempt case regarding the alleged flogging of some Muslims accused of stone-pelting during an event last year.

    During Navratri in October 2022, some villagers as well as policemen were injured after a mob comprising members of the Muslim community allegedly hurled stones at a garba dance event at Undhela village in Kheda district.

    Videos purportedly showing police personnel publicly flogging three of the 13 arrested accused went viral on social media.

    Later, some of the accused approached the HC claiming that the police personnel involved in the act had committed contempt of court by flouting Supreme Court directions on people in custody as laid down in the D K Basu vs State of West Bengal case.
    In his affidavit, Gadhiya said when the accused persons were taken to Undhela village for investigation, they “tried to misbehave and abuse the police officers”.

    “When 8 accused were brought at the village as part of investigation on October 4, the male accused, after getting down from police vehicle, started abusing verbally the police officials and one accused Shejadmiya Shukatmiya spitted on police inspector of LCB, Ashok Parmar,” the SP said in his affidavit.

    The SP further said other accused persons “collected stones in their hands and started instigating members of Hindu community who had gathered there. The accused did not pay heed to requests made for sitting in a police vehicle and started a scuffle with police”.

    Referring to the alleged flogging incident, the SP said that “as a result of this incident, there was a hue and cry, and it is only with a view to maintain the peace and harmony, that the suspects were cornered so that no untoward incident further takes place”.

    Through the affidavit, the SP also informed the court that as soon as he received instructions from the Range IG to inquire into the alleged flogging, he deputed Deputy SP of Kapadvanj Division to probe into the issue.

    In his interim report of December 1, the DySP stated when the accused persons had started misbehaving, the on-duty police officials were required to control them using other means instead of “physically abusing the accused with lathi”.

    “As per the interim report submitted by the DySP Kapadvanj, Range IG immediately acted against erring police officers and chargesheets have been issued to six policemen, including LCB PI A V Parmar, while the departmental proceedings are pending,” Gadhiya said.

    He submitted that transcripts of call recordings revealed that the entire incident of stone-pelting was “preset and pre-meditated with a view to create fear amongst the members of Hindu community and to disturb the law and order”.

    More than 150 persons from the minority community had cordoned off the Mataji Chowk and started pelting stones. The “pre-meditated” offence left 8 residents and three policemen injured, said the SP.

    In his affidavit, Police Inspector A V Parmar, claimed that the police officials in question had acted within their powers
    “Respondents (policemen) acted within the scope and ambit of their powers and there has not been any act committed by them which is beyond the powers conferred on the respondents. The acts of respondents are the acts in discharge of their duties and these acts were not done with any criminal intent,” said Parmar in his affidavit.

    He drew the court’s attention that “more or less, every year when Hindu festivals like Navratri is celebrated, some altercations happen between Hindus and Muslims of the village”. He added that one of the petitioners is already facing two cases of rioting and he was the main conspirator in this case too.

    “The petitioners themselves have engaged in disturbing the social fabric of a village by creating rifts between two communities and by assaulting people of that village. Petitioners are guilty of not stating true facts before this court and they themselves had created an atmosphere of fear and terror amongst law abiding citizens,” he said.

    Parmar said the present proceedings initiated by the petitioners for contempt of court are not maintainable as per the law.

    “The Parliament has already amended the CrPC (Code of Civil Procedure), 1908, and made appropriate safeguards by inserting provisions for the arrested persons and therefore guidelines issued earlier by the SC in the D K Basu case would give way in favour of those provisions of the amended CrPC,” he said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • San Francisco gets emptier and emptier, Musk finds it ‘tragic’

    San Francisco gets emptier and emptier, Musk finds it ‘tragic’

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    San Francisco: Tech leaders and internet stars are lamenting that downtown San Francisco’s real estate market has deteriorated and the city is getting “emptier and emptier”, with Elon Musk calling this “tragic”.

    File hosting service Dropbox’s chief financial officer Tim Regan said that they were relatively quick to market with subleasing plans.

    However, “the market has deteriorated, with many companies reducing their real estate footprint”, said Regan.

    San Francisco has been among the slowest US markets to rebound from the pandemic as tech companies did not open their offices and promoted remote work amid mass layoffs.

    Regan said during the company’s quarterly call this week that they no longer assume the company “will sublease additional space in San Francisco in the next few years”.

    Podcaster Elijah Schaffer tweeted that San Francisco is getting “emptier and emptier”.

    “Last time I went, a man was urinating on the Twitter building and the only people on the street were angry press trying to snap photos of @elonmusk,” he posted.

    “Sad what’s happened to this town and scary they think they know best for the world,” Schaffer said.

    Musk replied: “Tragic. I hope SF (San Francisco) comes back from this emptiness. It is such a beautiful city with so many amazing people”.

    In a video attached to his tweet, Schaffer said that so many businesses have closed in downtown San Francisco near his office, which is also shut.

    Musk said last month that office rentals in San Francisco will further drop. Twitter has its headquarters in the city.

    David Sacks, Co-founder and partner at Craft Ventures, tweeted that he got offered office space in San Francisco for the same price as 2009.

    Musk replied: “It will go lower”.

    Amid global recession fears, San Francisco stands to lose the most as work-from-home in the last three years of the pandemic at tech companies and expensive real estate has stalled the city’s growth.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Pakistan’s rights body finds spike in rights violations against Ahmadi community

    Pakistan’s rights body finds spike in rights violations against Ahmadi community

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    Lahore: A fact-finding mission led by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has reported an alarming uptick in the persecution of the minority Ahmadi community in the country’s Punjab province.

    The HRCP report, released on Wednesday, found evidence to suggest that the civil administration in Gujranwala and Wazirabad districts of Punjab were directly involved in destroying minarets on Ahmadi sites of worship in the last couple of months, following objections raised against the community by a local political-religious outfit.

    “The administration claims to have done so to circumvent the threat of mob violence,” the report said, adding that the way authorities handled the matter only fostered growing hostility towards the community, making community members more vulnerable.

    The Rights body expressed concerns on various issues faced by the minority community, including the desecration of Ahmadi graves, the destruction of minarets at their worship sites, and the FIRs filed against the members for carrying out ritual animal sacrifice on Eid.

    “Of particular concern is the administration’s perception that some legal and constitutional provisions provide room for the persecution of this kind, although the report notes that, under Article 20(b) of the Constitution, this is not the case,” the report said.

    “While the mission understands that the local bureaucracy, police and judiciary were successfully intimidated by a religious group (Tehreek-e-Laibbaik Pakistan), their response displays a pitiful inability to manage law and order while respecting the fundamental rights of the Ahmadi community,” the report added.

    The mission recommended the judgments of the Supreme Court from 2014 and 2021 be implemented, which includes the establishment of a special police force to guard religious minorities’ places of worship.

    It also called for developing the police’s capacity to deal with the threat of mob violence in such situations.

    Last month, an elderly woman of the Ahmadi community was denied burial at a graveyard by a local cleric and his followers in the Sialkot district of Punjab.

    In the past, such incidents occurred in other Ahmadi graveyards in Punjab, but not a single culprit was arrested or put on trial.

    Minorities, especially Ahmadis, are very vulnerable in Pakistan and are often targeted by religious extremists.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Thousands of Ukrainian children put through Russian ‘re-education’ camps, US report finds

    Thousands of Ukrainian children put through Russian ‘re-education’ camps, US report finds

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    At least 6,000 children from Ukraine have attended Russian “re-education” camps in the past year, with several hundred held there for weeks or months beyond their scheduled return date, according to a new report published in the US.

    Russia has also unnecessarily expedited the adoption and fostering of children from Ukraine in what could constitute a war crime, the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab report found. The report was funded by the US state department.

    Since the start of the war nearly a year ago, children as young as four months living in the occupied areas have been taken to 43 camps across Russia, including in Moscow-annexed Crimea and Siberia, for “pro-Russia patriotic and military-related education”, said the report.

    In at least two of the camps, the children’s return date was delayed by weeks, while at two other camps, the return of some children was postponed indefinitely.

    Russian authorities sought to provide a pro-Moscow viewpoint to children through school curricula as well as through field trips to patriotic sites and talks from veterans, the report found.

    Videos published from the camps by the occupying regional authorities show children in the camps singing the Russian national anthem and carrying the Russian flag. In separate videos, teachers, employed to teach the children, talk about the need to correct their understanding of Russian and Soviet history.

    Children were also given training in firearms, although Nathaniel Raymond, a Yale researcher who oversaw the report, said there was no evidence they were being sent back to fight.

    “Mounting evidence of Russia’s actions lays bare the Kremlin’s aims to deny and suppress Ukraine’s identity, history, and culture,” the US state department said in a statement. “The devastating impacts of Putin’s war on Ukraine’s children will be felt for generations.”

    US state department spokesperson Ned Price told reporters the report “details Russia’s systematic, government-wide efforts to permanently relocate thousands of Ukraine’s children to areas under Russian government control via a network of 43 camps and other facilities.

    “In many cases, Russia purported to temporarily evacuate children from Ukraine under the guise of a free summer camp, only to later refuse to return the children and to cut off all contact with their families.”

    The report called for a neutral body to be granted access to the camps and for Russia immediately to stop adoptions of Ukrainian children. The report said that Putin aides have been closely involved in the operation, especially Maria Lvova-Belova, the presidential commissioner for children’s rights. It quoted her as saying that 350 children had been adopted by Russian families and that more than 1,000 were awaiting adoption.

    Russia’s embassy in Washington responded to the report’s findings on Telegram, saying, “Russia accepted children who were forced to flee with their families from the shelling,” and, “We do our best to keep underage people in families, and in cases of absence or death of parents and relatives – to transfer orphans under guardianship.”

    The report said some parents were pressured to give consent to send away their children, sometimes in the hope they would return. Others, the report said, “are sent with the consent of their parents for an agreed duration of days or weeks and returned to their parents as originally scheduled”.

    The report -which was compiled with the help of satellite imagery and public accounts – said that the number of children sent to the camps is “likely significantly higher” than the 6,000 confirmed.

    Researchers spoke to the parents of children who had attended the camps or were being kept there, as well as to children who had attended. “After calling the camp director, one mother was allegedly told that children could not be returned because, ‘There is war there.’

    There is little information on the explanation given to children regarding delays in their return. An official at the Medvezhonok camp told a boy from Ukraine that his return was conditional: the children would be returned only if Russia recaptured the town of Izium, the report said. Another boy was told he wouldn’t be returning home due to his “pro-Ukrainian views”, the report said.

    Some parents were told that their children will be released only if they physically come to pick them up. Relatives or people given power of attorney were not allowed to pick up the children. Travel from Ukraine to Russia is difficult and expensive, and men between the ages of 18 and 60 are forbidden from leaving the country, in effect meaning only the mothers of the children may retrieve them.

    “A significant portion of these families are low-income and have not been able to afford to make the trip. Some families were forced to sell belongings and travel through four countries to be reunited with their child,” the report found.

    One of the camps is located in Magadan oblast, roughly 6,230km (3,900 miles) from Ukraine. This puts it “roughly three times closer to the United States than it is to the border of Ukraine,” the report said.

    Raymond said that Russia was in “clear violation” of the Fourth Geneva Convention on the treatment of civilians during war and called the report a “gigantic Amber alert” – referring to US public notices of child abductions.

    The Russian activity “in some cases may constitute a war crime and a crime against humanity”, he told reporters.

    Ukraine’s government recently claimed that more than 14,700 children had been deported to Russia, where some had been sexually exploited.

    Additional reporting by Isobel Koshiw and AFP



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Hyderabad: SC committee finds several irregularities in HCA

    Hyderabad: SC committee finds several irregularities in HCA

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    Hyderabad: The supervisory committee appointed by the Supreme Court of India to monitor the Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA) submitted its latest findings to the apex court on Tuesday.

    The report revealed startling facts on HCA memberships.

    No record of memberships exists. No documentary evidence on how the electoral roll of HCA was drawn in 2019 by the election officer.

    A few HCA members own 7-8 clubs. These members are responsible for ‘subverting the democracy’ by using their votes as well as manipulating the selection procedure for state teams.

    “They blackmail all institutionalized processes provided by Justice Lodha Committee reforms incorporated in the by-laws in state team selection procedure, buying and selling of teams,” the report said.

    “These said members also indulge in leasing teams that are under their control to brokers for lakhs of rupees. These brokers loot families of budding cricketers who dream of playing league matches hosted by HCA. These matches form the basis for selection to state teams,” the report said.

    HCA, which is recognised by the BCCI as the sole representative of cricket in Telangana, contains an imbalanced democracy. “This is because a majority of Hyderababd-based clubs form the electoral college of HCA while the remaining districts of Telangana do not have an equal say. The committee is working on a suitable model of memberships that are equitable,” the report stated.

    Moreover, the names of member clubs change frequently, raising suspicion of clubs being sold for crores of rupees, the report points out.

    “There have been complaints from the state government alleging large-scale frauds in HCA memberships, lack of intent to provide equal membership rights to districts and has also highlighted the disappearance of hundreds of clubs that existed 35 years ago. There is no record of how these clubs disappeared and who took them over,” the report stated.

    The report confirms through sources that membership frauds have existed since the 90s and have increased over time. It then says that the chairman of the committee was hesitant to sign the report, for reasons unknown.

    “Normally, frauds in membership have to be looked into by the Ombudsman. Some beneficiaries appointed the Ombudsman of their choice by using their majority and made sure complaints regarding fraudulent memberships, multiple clubs etc never see the light of the day,” the report said.

    Finally, the report suggested a decentralised structure for HCA with all districts and municipal corporations as members in order to stop the monopoly of private clubs.

    The selection process should be in line with Justice Lodha reforms which recognize the territory as the basis for memberships and led to the concept of one state-one vote.

    “A change is always desirable when systems are manipulated and institutionalized corruption takes over. The recent arrest of a vice-president of a member club of HCA on corruption charges only shows how deep-rooted the disease is,” the report concluded.

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    #Hyderabad #committee #finds #irregularities #HCA

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Bengaluru: Nearly 80 percent students demand eggs in mid-day meal, finds opinion poll

    Bengaluru: Nearly 80 percent students demand eggs in mid-day meal, finds opinion poll

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    Bengaluru: More than 38.37 lakh students of primary and high school students chose eggs as their protein source in their mid-day meal amid the “Satvik” food controversy, as per the data given by the education department.

    After the circular released by the Commissioner of Education Department of Karnataka, opinion was sought from the students on whether they want egg, peanut bar or banana as the protein source in their mid-day meals.

    The opinion was taken from the students in the different zones, where almost 80 per cent of students demanded eggs in their meals.

    Around 38.37 lakh students are studying in Classes 1 to 8 in Karnataka, among whom almost 80 per cent of students demanded eggs. Other 2.27 lakh students asked the government to provide peanut bars and Bananas, according to the survey of Education Department.

    Students mainly in the Belagavi division followed by Bengaluru and Kalburgi along with the Mysore division chose eggs for their meals to fulfil their nutrition demands especially when there is a discussion about “Satvik” food in schools.

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    #Bengaluru #percent #students #demand #eggs #midday #meal #finds #opinion #poll

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )