Tag: fired

  • SRK: I’ll never retire from acting, will have to be fired!

    SRK: I’ll never retire from acting, will have to be fired!

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    Mumbai: Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, whose latest release ‘Pathaan’ created a tizzy at the box-office, said that he will never retire from acting – he will have to be fired from it!

    Shah Rukh on Monday treated his fans to a question and answer session, where one asked him about who will be the next big thing after he retires.

    SRK replied: “I will never retire from acting…I will have to be fired…and maybe even then I will come back hotter!!”

    Talking about when he first saw himself on screen, the star said: “I get awkward seeing myself in screen.”

    A user asked him about his favourite car from his line-up and the one he would never sell, SRK told the user that all the news about his luxury cars is “bogus”.

    “Actually I don’t have any cool cars…except Hyundai of course. All social media articles about luxury cars I allegedly have are bogus.”

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    #SRK #Ill #retire #acting #fired

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Over 17,400 tech employees got fired in Feb globally to date

    Over 17,400 tech employees got fired in Feb globally to date

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    New Delhi: More than 17,400 employees in the tech industry have lost jobs in the month of February globally to date, with many workers in India receiving pink slips amid deepening global macroeconomic conditions.

    In 2023 so far, around 340 companies have laid off more than 1.10 lakh employees worldwide, and there appears to be no respite from job cuts.

    Major companies which commenced layoffs this month include Yahoo, BYJU’s, GoDaddy, GitHub, eBay, Autodesk, OLX Group and others.

    In January, close to 1 lakh of them lost jobs in the month of January globally, dominated by companies like Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Salesforce and others, according to layoff.fyi, a website that tracks job cuts globally.

    More than 3,300 tech employees lost jobs daily on average by more than 288 companies worldwide in January alone.

    More job cuts are likely coming in days to come amid recession fears.

    After firing 11,000 employees in November last year, Meta (formerly Facebook) is reportedly planning to reduce headcount further in its “year of efficiency”.

    Aviation giant Boeing is slashing 2,000 jobs in finance and HR verticals this year and the company outsources about a third of those jobs to Tata Consulting Services (TCS) in Bengaluru.

    In 2022, over 1,000 companies laid off 154,336 workers, as per the data from the layoffs tracking site Layoffs.fyi

    So far, more than 2.5 lakh tech employees have lost their jobs.

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    #tech #employees #fired #Feb #globally #date

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Rocket fired from Gaza Strip, intercepted by Israel

    Rocket fired from Gaza Strip, intercepted by Israel

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    Jerusalem: Israel intercepted a rocket from the Gaza Strip on Wednesday evening, a day after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken left the region in a visit that aimed at calming escalating violence.

    The rocket triggered sirens in the southern city of Sderot and in communities near the besieged Palestinian enclave, an Israeli military spokesperson said in a statement.

    No injuries have been reported so far, Xinhua news agency reported.

    The firing of the rocket came amid surging violence between Israelis and Palestinians, mainly in the occupied West Bank.

    Over the weekend, Israel carried out airstrikes on targets which the military said was an “underground rocket manufacturing site” in the central Gaza Strip that belongs to Hamas, an Islamist militant group that governs the Palestinian enclave. The attack followed six rockets that were fired from Gaza at southern Israel. No injuries were reported on both sides.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Rocket #fired #Gaza #Strip #intercepted #Israel

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • FDA chief: No one getting fired over baby formula crisis

    FDA chief: No one getting fired over baby formula crisis

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    “But the short answer is no one’s going to be reassigned or fired because of the infant formula situation,” Califf told reporters.

    Scrutiny of the FDA’s foods division increased after advocates and lawmakers accused the agency of failing to rapidly and effectively address an infant formula contamination event that had a major impact on U.S. supply. The actions unveiled by Califf on Tuesday follow an external review of the foods division that found “constant turmoil” within its ranks, and a complex leadership structure that left staff “wondering which program is responsible for decision-making.”

    Baby formula supplies have bounced back since the widespread shortages triggered by a recall that sent parents scrambling for supplies last year. But some families — especially those with medically vulnerable children — are still struggling to find formula.

    Top FDA officials were warned about food safety concerns at a key infant formula plant months before the agency’s inspectors found strains of a bacteria that can be deadly to babies. Months after those warnings, Abbott, the company at the center of the formula crisis, issued a recall of some formula products and shut down the facility, triggering widespread shortages across the country. The company, which maintains there is no connection between the bacteria found at the plant and the deaths of several babies, is now under criminal investigation by the Justice Department.

    “Where there could have been better performance, that’s reflected in the performance evaluation system. And, of course, that’s confidential information between supervisors and employees,” Califf said in response to the question from POLITICO.

    Califf said the proposed foods division reforms included streamlining reporting structures; clarifying the relationship between the Office of Regulatory Affairs, which is the lead for field food safety inspections, and the food oversight division; and creating a Center for Excellence in Nutrition. Califf also proposed unifying much of the foods program under a single leader who reports directly to him, which would mean “removing redundancies” and “enabling the agency to oversee human food in a more effective and efficient way.”

    FDA Principal Deputy Commissioner Janet Woodcock told reporters on Tuesday that FDA’s formula response was “a systems problem, not an individual problem.” She also noted an internal review of FDA’s infant formula supply chain response last year. As POLITICO reported, the report didn’t name any specific teams responsible for breakdowns at FDA and surprised stakeholders with its lack of accountability.

    “And so the system fixes that we are putting in place, both the information technology support as well as many of the changes, will address all the different issues,” Woodcock said.

    “This was a failure of the systems — to the extent there was a failure — to provide the information to the right people at the right time,” Woodcock added.

    Califf and other top FDA officials, despite acknowledging to lawmakers a string of internal breakdowns that contributed to the crisis, have pushed back against claims that there were any major failures at the agency. That includes a breakdown in internal FDA communication that some senior FDA officials said prevented them from knowing about the food safety issues until just weeks before the recall.

    Califf and Yiannas said a whistleblower report alleging food safety problems at the plant, which was mailed in October 2021, did not reach the FDA’s highest ranks until mid-February 2022. Califf, in testimony to lawmakers, said senior officials didn’t receive the whistleblower report due to pandemic “mailroom issues.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • 2 rockets fired from Gaza at Israel after deadly West Bank raid

    2 rockets fired from Gaza at Israel after deadly West Bank raid

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    Jerusalem: Two rockets fired from Gaza at southern Israel were intercepted by the Israeli aerial defence systems early on Friday, following the killing of nine Palestinians by Israeli soldiers earlier.

    No injuries and damage were reported.

    The rockets, fired just after midnight between Thursday and Friday, triggered sirens in the southern city of Ashkelon and the communities of kibbutz Zikim and Karmia, Xinhua news agency reported, citing a statement by the Israeli military spokesperson.

    “Two rockets were fired from the Gaza Strip,” the spokesperson said. “The rockets were intercepted by the IDF Aerial Defence Array.”

    No group immediately assumed responsibility for the rockets.

    Tensions were simmering after Israeli forces killed nine Palestinians, including a 61-year-old woman, in the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank on Thursday morning. The army said the raid was carried out to foil “a terror squad” that planned an attack against Israelis.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #rockets #fired #Gaza #Israel #deadly #West #Bank #raid

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Top Tennessee pair fired after damning review of state’s execution protocol

    Top Tennessee pair fired after damning review of state’s execution protocol

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    Two top Tennessee officials have been fired by the corrections department after an independent report revealed striking errors in the state’s lethal injection execution protocol.

    According to official documents reviewed by the Tennessean newspaper, the deputy commissioner and general counsel, Debra Inglis, was fired, as well as inspector general Kelly Young, on 27 December.

    The firings came a day before Governor Bill Lee publicized the report, which found that multiple executions were carried out in recent years without proper testing of the drugs used in the lethal injection death penalty process.

    Specifically, the report revealed that when Tennessee revised its lethal injection protocol in 2018, there was no evidence of the state ever providing the pharmacy in charge of testing the drugs with a copy of its lethal injection protocol.

    The report also found that the three drugs used in the state’s protocol – midazolam to sedate the person, vecuronium bromide to paralyze the person and potassium chloride to stop their heart – were not properly tested for endotoxins, a type of contaminant.

    Since 2018, seven prisoners have been executed in Tennessee following a nearly decade-long hiatus in executions. Five chose to die in the electric chair while two were administered lethal injections.

    Last April the state called off the execution of inmate Oscar Smith an hour before his scheduled execution after Lee acknowledged the state’s failure to properly adhere to its lethal injection protocol.

    According to the report released in December, in all seven executions since 2018, none of the lethal injections – some of which were prepared in case the person to be put to death changed their mind and opted to be executed by lethal injection instead of electrocution – were tested for endotoxins.

    In the case of one person who was executed by lethal injection, the report also found that the midazolam used during his execution was not tested for potency. The report revealed that in 2017, a pharmacist warned state correction officials that midazolam “‘does not elicit strong analgesic effects’, meaning ‘[t]he subjects may be able to feel pain from the administration of the second and third drugs’”.

    According to inmates’ expert witnesses, midazolam has been said to cause sensations of doom, panic, drowning and asphyxiation.

    Some US states, especially Alabama, are embroiled in scandal over botched executions by lethal injection.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • IT professional sells home and car to join Amazon in Europe, fired

    IT professional sells home and car to join Amazon in Europe, fired

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    New Delhi: An IT professional from Kenya sold his home and his car to join Amazon in Europe got fired by the company just four days before he was set to move there.

    Earlier this month, Amazon announced to lay off 18,000 employees globally, which were said to start from January 18.

    Tom Mboya Opiyo was among the 18,000 people impacted by Amazon’s mass layoffs.

    Impacted by the layoff, Opiyo, took to LinkedIn, where he shared his ordeal.

    “Well, last week I shared about my impending exciting move abroad. It was a relocation role to Europe with a leading global company. Sadly, it has fallen through due to business changes as part of the organisation’s ‘annual operating review’ that impacted the role and many others. The organisation is shedding jobs globally and the information is available online,” Opiyo wrote in his LinkedIn Post.

    “We were to travel this weekend so that I start work on Monday, 16th Jan and the call came 4 days to that date,” he added.

    Opiyo further said that his family is truly devastated after planning for the move for 6 months and believes that God will have a better plan for them.

    He also mentioned that he and his will also go for counselling.

    Opiyo concluded his post by saying, “For me, I didn’t expect to be in this kind of situation at this stage in my career but that’s what life is about. Some have to experience certain situations so as to be an example to others. Keep us in prayers. God is good all the time”.

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