Tag: Flags

  • Adipurush trailer launch: Saffron flags, ‘Jai Shri Ram’ chants in movie halls

    Adipurush trailer launch: Saffron flags, ‘Jai Shri Ram’ chants in movie halls

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    Ahead of the trailer launch of the widely anticipated film ‘Adipurush’, starring Prabhas as Lord Ram, Kriti Sanon as goddess Sita, Sunny Singh as Lakshman and Saif Ali Khan as Raavan, flags walked in the venue — a multiplex in the heart of Mumbai’s Juhu area with saffron flags chanting ‘Jai Shri Ram’.

    As the media waited with bated breath for the trailer release, fans, dressed in ethnic wear, walked in holding saffron flags and chanted the name of Lord Ram, who is essayed by Prabhas in the film.

    They also chanted “Shri Ram Lakshman Janki, Jai Hanuman ki” (Lord Ram, Lakshman and Sita, all hail Lord Hanuman).

    MS Education Academy

    The religious emotion was also drummed up by the emcee who chanted in unison with the crowd.

    The coordinated activity also saw different placards on the same lines. The chants grew stronger as the trailer release drew closer.

    Earlier, the film’s dialogue writer Manoj Muntashir countered Congress’s claim for putting a ban on the religious outfit Bajrang Dal as a part of their manifesto during the high-voltage Karnataka elections.

    ‘Adipurush’, is set to be released theatrically on June 16.

    Similar scenes were witnessed in Hyderabad during the trailer launch in the city where fans raised slogans of ‘Jai Shree Ram’, after flocking to the AMB theatre in Gachibowli and streets surrounding it as the word of Prabhas’s attendance spread like wildfire.

    Kriti and Prabhas watched the trailer inside the theatre alongside the ecstatic fans.

    (With inputs from IANS)

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    #Adipurush #trailer #launch #Saffron #flags #Jai #Shri #Ram #chants #movie #halls

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • LG flags off marathon to celebrate 100th episode of PM Narendra Modi’s Monologue ‘Mann Ki Baat’

    LG flags off marathon to celebrate 100th episode of PM Narendra Modi’s Monologue ‘Mann Ki Baat’

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    Srinagar, Apr 30: Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha flagged off the marathon organised by Hindustan Scouts and Guides, Dogra Kranti Dal and Kashmir Road Safety Foundation on the eve of 100th episode of PM Narendra Modi’s monologue ‘Mann Ki Baat’.

    100 marathons were organised today across J&K to celebrate 100th episode of Hon’ble PM Shri Narendra Modi Ji’s Mann Ki Baat radio programme, and raise awareness and strengthen action and cooperation against drug abuse and drug trafficking.

    The Lt Governor expressed gratitude to the Hon’ble Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi for inspiring the youth of the country through Mann Ki Baat to overcome challenges and set the ambitious goal in life. The Hon’ble Prime Minister has brought together youth from different backgrounds with a single dream of nation building, he added.

    “India’s greatest strength is its unity in diversity. Through Mann Ki Baat programme Hon’ble Prime Minister has inspired the people to take pride in their heritage and acknowledged remarkable contribution of scientists, teachers, litterateurs, artistes in raising India’s stature in the world,” said the Lt Governor.

    Addressing the youth on the occasion, the Lt Governor said, people from different walks of life have joined the fight against drug menace.

    “Today, the youth of Jammu Kashmir have stood up against drug abuse. I am confident that our collective efforts will eliminate the narco-terrorism unleashed by neighboring country and lead the way for realising the goals of building a drug free Jammu Kashmir, observed the Lt Governor.

    Sh Jugal Kishore Sharma, Member Parliament; Sh Balwant Singh Mankotia, Chief Patron, Dogra Kranti Dal; senior civil and police officials; office bearers of Hindustan Scouts and Guides and Kashmir Road Safety Foundation, young Scouts and Guides were present.(GNS)

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    #flags #marathon #celebrate #100th #episode #Narendra #Modis #Monologue #Mann #Baat

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi flags off Vande Bharat train in Thiruvananthapuram

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi flags off Vande Bharat train in Thiruvananthapuram

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    Prime Minister Narendra Modi flags off Vande Bharat train in Thiruvananthapuram



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    #Prime #Minister #Narendra #Modi #flags #Vande #Bharat #train #Thiruvananthapuram

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • AP: Vijayawada division flags off 100th three-phase locomotive

    AP: Vijayawada division flags off 100th three-phase locomotive

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    Vijayawada: At a time when the Indian Railways is according major thrust to electrification, the South Central Railway (SCR) zone’s Vijayawada Division has marked the milestone of flagging off the 100th three-phase electric locomotive.

    Divisional railway manager (DRM) Shivendra Mohan has flagged of the locomotive from the Electric Loco Shed (ELS) in Vijayawada on Wednesday evening, which was built at the Chitranjan Locomotive Works and allotted to the division.

    Established in April 1981, ELS has completed 42 years of service and it was initially commissioned to maintain conventional electric locomotives, a statement shared on Thursday.

    MS Education Academy

    Following servicing such locomotives for four decades, the loco shed has graduated to take up upgraded versions, 3-Phase electric locomotives, from April 2021.

    “In a span of just two years, ELS has proved its capacity and calibre to commission and maintain 100 3-Phase locomotives,” said the statement.

    Further, the shed functions as an electric locomotive power depot, performing locomotive maintenance and repair services for the Railways.

    It also offers all major and minor schedules such as annual overhauling, intermediate overhauling, monthly checks and schedules to maintain the fitness of locomotives.

    Currently, the Vijayawada shed holds 264 locomotives, 100 three-phase electric ones and 164 conventional electric locomotives.

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    #Vijayawada #division #flags #100th #threephase #locomotive

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • PM Modi flags off Chennai-Coimbatore Vande Bharat Express in TN

    PM Modi flags off Chennai-Coimbatore Vande Bharat Express in TN

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    Chennai: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday flagged off the Chennai-Coimbatore Vande Bharat Express, which is expected to cut down the travel time between the state capital here and the western industrial city by more than one hour.

    In a function at the MGR Chennai Central Railway Station, the PM flagged off the inaugural special of the train, loaded with modern features and passenger amenities. He also interacted with school students in the train.

    “It is the fastest train between the two cities with a travel time of 5 hours and 50 minutes, saving more than an hour of journey time,” an official release said.

    MS Education Academy

    “The wonderful cities of Chennai and Coimbatore have even better connectivity thanks to the Vande Bharat Express. Flagged off the train and also met young friends on the occasion,” the PM later tweeted.

    The train, the first to connect two Tamil Nadu cities, has enhanced passenger safety with indigenous automatic train protection system ‘KAVACH’, CCTV cameras in all coaches and automatic sliding doors.

    Divyang (differently-abled) friendly washrooms, seat handle numbers in Braille script, modern amenities like LED lights and 360-degree rotatable seats are the other features.

    Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw, TN Governor R N Ravi, Chief Minister M K Stalin and Union Minister of State L Murugan were present.

    While the train will leave from Coimbatore at 6.00 am and reach here at 11.50 pm, it will start for the western city from Chennai at 2.25 pm and reach there at 8.15 pm, Southern Railway said.

    It will stop at Salem, Erode and Tirupur. The service will be operated on all days except Wednesday.

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    #Modi #flags #ChennaiCoimbatore #Vande #Bharat #Express

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Gadkari flags poor quality of DPRs of road projects as major problem

    Gadkari flags poor quality of DPRs of road projects as major problem

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    Nagpur: Union Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari said on Friday that the bad quality of Detailed Project Reports (DPRs) leads to a host of problems including cost escalation in road projects, and he was in the “mood to take a decision to allow international firms to make them.”

    He was speaking at the International Conference on Asian Scenario on Infrastructural Development here.

    There is a need to reduce the cost of production in road projects, he said.

    Expressing disappointment over the quality of DPRs in road construction, the minister said he has “never seen a perfect DPR” in his life.

    The construction industry should work on improving the DPR quality, he said.

    “I am in the mood to take a decision to allow international companies to make DPRs and giving them priority, though I am not of that opinion, but because of not so good DPRs, lot of problems are being faced. Everywhere there is cost escalation,” Gadkari said.

    He also said that agriculture by-products and biomass should be utilised in construction work.

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    #Gadkari #flags #poor #quality #DPRs #road #projects #major #problem

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • KU VC Flags Off Rally On Eve Of International Women’s Day

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    SRINAGAR: Vice-Chancellor University of Kashmir Prof Nilofer Khan on Tuesday flagged off a rally organised on the eve of International Women’s Day, celebrated across the world on March 8.

    The rally, which was attended by faculty, research scholars and students, was organised by Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) of the University as part of its day-long awareness-cum-sensitisation programme on ‘Prevention of Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace’.

    Congratulating the ICC for organising regular sensitisation programmes involving students and civil society, Prof Nilofer said such programmes reinforce our institutional commitment to create a congenial work atmosphere in the campus and also reiterate the message of ‘zero tolerance policy’ for sexual harassment at workplace.

    The Vice-Chancellor said both men and women have to come forward and join hands to achieve gender equality and make the society a better place to live in.

    “Our University recently held a Civil20 Working Group Meeting on Gender Equality as part of India’s G20 Presidency. The meeting evolved a number of resolutions which are being submitted to the G20 platform for consideration. This shows that academic institutions can play a great role in spreading the message of gender equality,” she said.

    Dean Research KU Prof Irshad A Nawchoo, Presiding Officer ICC Prof Aneesa Shafi, Director EMRC and Media Advisor Dr Salima Jan, Joint Registrar Asmat Kawoosa and other senior academics, officers and ICC members were present on the occasion.

    The rally, led by Prof Aneesa Shafi, later passed through the main campus roads and culminated at Gandhi Bhawan, where academics and experts joined deliberations on Prevention of Sexual Harassment at Workplace.

    Prof Aneesa Shafi delivered the welcome address and introduced the theme of the programme after which three technical sessions were held.

    In the first technical session, Ms Sleet Shah, SDPO Cyber Crime, spoke about ‘Sexual Harassment and Role of Police’, while Dr Heena Basharat, Assistant Professor, School of Law KU shared her experiences gained through an empirical study on the subject. In the second technical session, Dr Anil Kumar, Assistant Professor (Sociology), Department of Law at Central University of Kashmir talked about PoSH Act from 2013 to 2023 and Dr Salima Jan dwelt on PoSH Act and role of media. In the third technical session, Dr Himabindu M, Coordinator Department of Politics and Governance spoke about the ‘Impact and Intention: Outcomes of PoSH Act 2013’ while Dr Saima Farhad, Assistant Professor, Department of Social Work KU, spoke on ‘PoSH Act and UGC Regulations’. Dr Mir Junaid Alam, Assistant Professor, School of Law KU talked about ‘Information Technology and Harassment Against Women’. The technical sessions were chaired by Dr Aliya Ahmad, Head, MERC KU and Prof Tabassum Firdous, Director CCAS KU.

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    #Flags #Rally #Eve #International #Womens #Day

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Hyderabad: Commissioner C V Anand flags off Janbhagidari – 10K run by RBI

    Hyderabad: Commissioner C V Anand flags off Janbhagidari – 10K run by RBI

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    Hyderabad: City police commissioner C V Anand flagged off Janbhagidari, a 10K run at People’s Plaza, Necklace road organized by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Saturday.

    The run was organized in the backdrop of India assuming G-20 presidency from December 1, 2022 to November 2023, with the second Global Partnership for Financial Inclusion that is to be held on March 6 and 7 in Hyderabad.

    Creating public outreach and promoting financial literacy amongst the public, emphasizing safe and secure banking transactions were the main intentions behind the organisation of the run.

    The police commissioner inaugurated the run upon the invitation of RBI Telangana regional director K Nikhila. Hyderabad police and RBI together organised the event to empower the citizens to make informed decisions and stay safe from cyber fraudsters.

    The event was a huge success, with a large number of people participating from various parts of the city, said a press release on Saturday.

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    #Hyderabad #Commissioner #Anand #flags #Janbhagidari #10K #run #RBI

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Culture |  The flags fly in honor of the Kalevala and Finnish culture on Tuesday

    Culture | The flags fly in honor of the Kalevala and Finnish culture on Tuesday

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    The Kalevala Day was officially flagged in 1978.

    Tuesday let’s celebrate Kalevala and Finnish culture day. It’s the official flag day, and the flags fly in secret from eight in the morning until sunset.

    The author of Kalevala, or Finland’s national epic, was Elias lönnrot, who in the 19th century collected folk poems from Eastern Finland and Viena Karelia, among others. The Kalevala was completed in 1835, and Lönnrot wrote the preface to it just on February 28.

    As the material accumulated, Lönnrot began working on a new, more extensive Kalevala, which appeared in 1849.

    The Kalevala day has been marked on the Finnish calendar since 1950, and two years later, in the University of Helsinki’s almanac, the day was among the general flag days. The Kalevala Day was officially flagged in 1978.

    #Culture #flags #fly #honor #Kalevala #Finnish #culture #Tuesday

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    #Culture #flags #fly #honor #Kalevala #Finnish #culture #Tuesday
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • Why one state’s plan to unwind a Covid-era Medicaid rule is raising red flags

    Why one state’s plan to unwind a Covid-era Medicaid rule is raising red flags

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    The high-speed effort in Arkansas, where more than a third of the state’s 3 million people are on Medicaid, offers an early glimpse at the potential disruption in store for the country as states comb through their Medicaid rolls for the first time in three years. These verifications, once routine, were suspended during the pandemic, and their resumption nationwide could lead to as many as 15 million people, including 5.3 million children, losing their health insurance.

    While some states are taking pains to create a safety net to keep people insured, whether under Medicaid or a different health plan, other state Medicaid agencies are facing pressure from GOP governors and legislatures to work through the process as quickly as possible.

    “It’s not surprising to me that we have a state like Arkansas — and now we’re beginning to hear from other states as well — where the pressure to move fast is going to be overwhelming,” said Sara Rosenbaum, professor of health law and policy at the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University. “The net result of all of this is that I expect — and look, the [federal] government expects — a lot of people to fall through the cracks. I think the government has seriously underestimated just how many people are going to fall through the cracks.”

    Sanders, who also earlier this month introduced a new Medicaid work requirement, is focused “on implementing bold policies that move people from government dependency to a lifetime of prosperity,” a spokesperson said.

    Arkansas’ truncated timeline — the shortest announced by any state — coupled with the fact that thousands lost Medicaid when the state briefly implemented a work requirement in 2018, has many fearing that tens of thousands of low-income Arkansans who are still eligible for Medicaid will lose access to their doctors and medications because they fail to fill out the requisite paperwork.

    “This is so much bigger than the work requirements, so it could be much more devastating. Work requirements were … just a few thousand people. This is everybody,” said Loretta Alexander, health policy director of Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. “You just know that there’s going to be some people that fall through the cracks.”

    But Gavin Lesnick, a spokesperson for the Arkansas Department of Human Services, said the state has learned lessons from its past and is “confident” its plan will “properly protect benefits for eligible Medicaid recipients.”

    “The Arkansas Department of Human Services has worked to develop a comprehensive unwinding plan that both protects taxpayer dollars and ensures that recipients who remain eligible for and need Medicaid benefits keep their coverage,” he said. “Our primary goal is to make sure Medicaid resources are being properly utilized.”

    During the pandemic, enrollment in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program swelled by more than 25 percent, surpassing 90 million, as a result of a congressionally created requirement that states keep people continuously covered in exchange for extra federal funding.

    Unwinding that program represents one of the biggest reshufflings of the health care landscape since Obamacare began nearly a decade ago. And while Arkansas is moving the fastest to complete its unwinding work, GOP lawmakers in other states, such as Arizona, are eyeing whether there is anything they can do to expedite their work as well.

    Still, national health care experts are warily eyeing Arkansas, in part, because of its history with work requirements, which many view as a cautionary tale of how Medicaid recipients can be tripped up by bureaucratic paperwork and lose coverage.

    More than 18,000 low-income adults were thrown off Medicaid in 2018 for failing to show that they worked or participated in another job-related activity for at least 80 hours in a month. Many complained that a confusing system made it difficult to comply with the rules, and a 2019 study found that a lack of awareness and confusion about the new rule led to a wave of terminations, despite the fact that 95 percent of an estimated 140,000 affected people should have remained covered.

    Similarly, a recent survey from the Urban Institute, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, found that 64 percent of adults in Medicaid-enrolled families had heard nothing about the return to the regular renewal process.

    “I don’t think [the state] set out to strip people of coverage they were entitled to receive back in 2018,” Rosenbaum said. “But if the process is subjected to very intense expectations about speed, a lot of the errors that we saw in the work requirements experiment — where people were not contacted or they couldn’t understand the contact and the information was incorrect or incomplete — we’re going to see it all over again.”

    GOP lawmakers — who passed a bill creating the six-month timeline for completing redeterminations in 2021 — believe the state will be able to both complete its work in a timely fashion and prevent eligible people from accidentally losing coverage. They argue that moving through the process as quickly as possible will free Medicaid resources for the state’s most vulnerable.

    “We want to take care of our Arkansans that really need help, but we also understand that we live in a budget neutral state and we have to have a balanced budget, so we have to be smart about our finances,” said Republican state Sen. Missy Irvin, chair of the state Senate Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee. “We want to secure these programs so that they’re sustainable for the people that really really need them.”

    Because Arkansas continued to conduct renewals and redeterminations during the pandemic — despite not being able to remove anyone from state rolls — it has identified more than 420,000 people who appear to be ineligible for Medicaid and need to go through the renewal process by the end of September to determine whether they qualify. An additional 240,000 people will go through the regular renewal process over the course of the year.

    Organizations who work with Medicaid recipients say the state’s interim work — coupled with the fact the state started sending renewal letters to beneficiaries earlier this month, essentially giving itself a two month head start — is likely to make the process of conducting renewals an easier, though still daunting, task. It also means that the state is planning to meet CMS’s recommendation that states process no more than one-ninth of their caseload each month in all but two months of the renewal process.

    “CMS has long communicated that states may have a large volume of pending redeterminations. That is why the agency has stressed that states and territories will need a reasonable period of time to complete this work effectively, efficiently, and according to the letter of the law,” a CMS spokesperson said.

    Still, Arkansas hospitals — aware of the state’s past challenges — are fretting about potential coverage losses.

    “Most of the hospital administrators out there remember what it was like before — the huge numbers of people who had no coverage. We were having to care for and take those losses,” Melanie Thomasson, vice president of financial policy and data analytics at the Arkansas Hospital Association. “Right now, taking those losses would be devastating.”

    Groups such as Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families laud some of the steps Arkansas’ Medicaid agency has taken to smooth the unwinding process, such as improving communication between the state’s SNAP and Medicaid eligibility systems, translating documents for the state’s Marshallese community, and reaching out to organizations with whom they have previously had an adversarial relationship, such as Legal Aid, which has sued the state Medicaid agency at least five times in the last seven years.

    The state has also brought on an additional 350 contract caseworkers to handle the increased work, made plans to hand-deliver renewal packets to its most vulnerable Medicaid recipients, and opened a telephone hotline so people can verify and update their contact information.

    Arkansas Medicaid advocates also note that, unlike in 2018, redetermination is happening on a national scale under an administration that has put guardrails in place for the unwinding process and is acutely concerned about Medicaid recipients erroneously losing coverage. And they note that the state has had years, not months, to prepare.

    “I think they’ve learned from past experiences. Even before the work requirements were over, you could see that they were starting to actually recognize the mistakes that had been made and trying to figure out how to get past the initial fumbling that they had done when they introduced it,” Alexander said. “They recognize what’s going on and how important this is and how many things can go wrong if they don’t get it right.”

    Still, organizations on the ground say it’s not a matter of if but how many people who are still eligible for Medicaid lose their coverage, raising concerns about whether the state will have enough staff to conduct the renewals and is spending enough money on outreach to make sure people are on the lookout for their renewal letters and know they need to respond.

    Arkansas’ renewal form asks for a litany of details, including proof of income and a full list of people’s financial resources, such as checking and savings accounts, property and cash on hand, vehicles owned, medical costs, costs to take care of others, a full list of household members, whether a child with an absent parent resides in their household and the absent parent’s Social Security number. Failing to answer the questions correctly could mean losing Medicaid coverage.

    And observers of the Medicaid unwinding process also remain worried about the state’s ability to connect people who are no longer eligible for Medicaid coverage onto low- or no-cost plans on the federal health insurance exchange.

    “We will have some individuals that are inappropriately disenrolled, but we’ll have many more individuals who will be appropriately disenrolled but may not find their way forward into a subsidized plan on the health insurance marketplace,” said Joe Thompson, president and CEO of the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement. “I think a great deal of focus has been on redetermining Medicaid eligibility. We have not made similar investments in terms of navigating people to health insurance exchange plans.”

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    #states #plan #unwind #Covidera #Medicaid #rule #raising #red #flags
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )