Tag: general

  • Government Seeks Feedback From General Public On Property Tax

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    SRINAGAR: Amid growing criticism over imposition of property tax in Jammu and Kashmir, the administration of the Union Territory has sought feedback from the general public over the proposed tax.

    In a notice, the Housing and Urban Development has sought suggestions/ comments from the general public over imposition of property tax in Jammu and Kashmir.

    “Any suggestions/ comments in this regard are welcome and may be sent to the Housing and Urban Development Department at the email address [email protected] within 10 days,” reads the notice.

    The notice states that UT of JK is levying property tax on residential houses/apartments, commercial establishments, within the municipal areas from April 01, 2023 in terms of two notifications issued by the H&UDD on Feb 21.

    On February 21, 2023, JK’s Housing and Urban Development Department issued two separate notifications for levying, assessment and collection of property tax in the urban areas of Jammu and Kashmir, where 27% of the UT’s population resides as per the 2011 census figures.

    The Jammu and Kashmir Property Tax (Municipal Corporation) Rules, 2023 and the Jammu & Kashmir (Other Municipalities) Rules, 2023, notified by the government, define the procedure for collection of property tax within the limits of municipal corporations, committees and councils in the UT.

    As per these rules, property tax is to be 5% of the taxable annual value (TAV) on residential properties and 6% of the taxable annual value on commercial properties.

    The rules faced widespread criticism, with political parties including National Conference, Congress, Peoples Conference, and Peoples Democratic Party assailing the move. Even the State BJP distanced itself from the move. (KNO)

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    #Government #Seeks #Feedback #General #Public #Property #Tax

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • DE Kashmir University General Merit List of the various Programs

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    DE Kashmir University General Merit List of the various Programs

    Dated: 10-3-23

    For General Merit List of the various Programs click link below:

    General Merit List of the candidates who have applied for the post of contractual lecturer in Urdu; Dated: 9-3-2023

    General Merit List of the candidates who have applied for the post of contractual lecturer in Islamic Studies; Dated: 9-3-2023

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    JKSSB Govt Jobs – Check Updates
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    [ad_2] #Kashmir #University #General #Merit #List #Programs( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • New York governor, attorney general press pharmacy chains on abortion drug policy

    New York governor, attorney general press pharmacy chains on abortion drug policy

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    walgreens 92863

    Walgreens, the nation’s second-largest pharmacy chain and owner of New York-based Duane Reade, confirmed last week that it would not dispense abortion pills either by mail or at brick-and-mortar locations in several states where they remain legal.

    The company announced the decision after nearly two dozen Republican state attorneys general threatened legal action if it began distributing the drugs, which have become the most popular method of ending a pregnancy in the U.S.

    “We urge you not to allow these tactics to intimidate you, and to commit to making this critical medication available as widely as possible, based on a fair and unbiased interpretation of state and federal law,” Hochul and James wrote in their letter to the pharmacy executives.

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday that the state would not renew a $54 million contract with Walgreens in response to the company’s decision. A renewal of the contract, under which Walgreens provides medications to California inmates, was scheduled to take effect May 1.

    New York state does not appear to have any active contracts with Walgreens, according to a review of records with the state comptroller’s office.

    The FDA announced in January that it would allow retail pharmacies to dispense the abortion pill mifepristone to pregnant people with a prescription, following the release of new data on the drugs’ safety and efficacy. Before then, patients had to get the medication directly from a doctor.

    Under the new policy, pharmacies must obtain certification to dispense the medication. Walgreens has said it is working on getting certified in some states, which the company declined to name, but is not yet distributing the pills anywhere.

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    #York #governor #attorney #general #press #pharmacy #chains #abortion #drug #policy
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • US Consulate General invites candidates for jobs in Hyderabad

    US Consulate General invites candidates for jobs in Hyderabad

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    US Consulate General has invited applications from persons who are looking for jobs in Hyderabad.

    Currently, the consulate general is looking for candidates for ‘Safety Program Coordinator’, ‘HVAC Maintenance Worker’, and ‘Surveillance Detection Monitor’ jobs in its Hyderabad office.

    As per the details provided on its official website, the positions are permanent and full-time which requires candidates to dedicate 40 hours per week.

    Eligibility for jobs in US Consulate General in Hyderabad

    To qualify for the Safety Program Coordinator position, candidates must have two years of college or university studies, as well as at least three years of experience in maintenance or construction.

    Candidates applying for the HVAC Maintenance Worker position must have completed secondary school and have at least three years of experience in repairing and maintaining commercial or industrial HVAC systems.

    For the Surveillance Detection Monitor position, applicants must have completed high school and have at least one year of the military, police, or private experience in the field of security.

    Benefits and how to apply

    The selected candidate for ‘Safety Program Coordinator’ position will be getting a salary of Rs. 960,298 per annum. In case of ‘HVAC Maintenance Worker’ and ‘Surveillance Detection Monitor’, the candidates will be paid Rs. 547,416 and Rs. 447,348 per annum respectively.

    Interested and eligible candidates can apply for the jobs at the official website of the US Consulate General in Hyderabad (click here).

    After receiving the applications, concerned authorities will scrutinize them.

    For the ‘Safety Program Coordinator’ and ‘HVAC Maintenance Worker’ positions, the late date for applying is March 22, 2023, whereas, for ‘Surveillance Detection Monitor’, the last date is March 26. For more detail, candidates can visit the official website.

    US Consulate office in Hyderabad

    Established in 2009, the US Consulate in Hyderabad was the first US diplomatic office to open in India since 1947. It is currently located in Paigah Palace, Chiran Fort Lane, Begumpet.

    The Hyderabad Consular District encompasses three states:

    1. Telangana,
    2. Andhra Pradesh, and
    3. Odisha

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    #Consulate #General #invites #candidates #jobs #Hyderabad

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ex-Pak general arrested for incitement against institutions

    Ex-Pak general arrested for incitement against institutions

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    Islamabad: Lieutenant General (retd) Amjad Shoaib was detained by the Islamabad police on Monday on charges of inciting the public against national institutions.

    Cops from the Ramna police station apprehended the former army officer from his residence in the federal capital, Geo News reported.

    An FIR was registered against Lt Gen (retd) Shoaib on February 25 at Islamabad’s Ramna Police Station under Sections 153A (promoting enmity between different groups, etc) and 505 (statements conducing to public mischief) of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC).

    According to the FIR, filed on the complaint of Islamabad Magistrate Owais Khan, the former army officer incited people to revolt against institutions and attempted to provoke disharmony, and anarchy and create a law and order situation in the country through his controversial statements made on a TV show, Geo News reported.

    “Through his remarks and analysis, Lt Gen (retd) Amjad Shoaib has provoked government employees against carrying out their official duties. The aim of his controversial advice to the people, government employees and an opposition party is to comments is to promote enmity among the people.”

    The statement of the former military official, the FIR stated, is part of a “planned conspiracy” to weaken the country, Geo News reported.

    Lt Gen (retd) Shoaib was previously summoned by the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) to appear on September 7, 2022 after he made claims about a meeting between the Pakistani prime minister and an Israeli team.

    However, he failed to appear before the FIA’s Cybercrimes Wing.

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    #ExPak #general #arrested #incitement #institutions

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Florida Surgeon General Joe Ladapo investigated for allegedly falsifying Covid report

    Florida Surgeon General Joe Ladapo investigated for allegedly falsifying Covid report

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    virus outbreak florida 66179

    Ladapo’s report was used as evidence in vaccine guidance he released in October that came under heavy criticism from the medical community, which said the surgeon general’s stance that the vaccine posed a health risk in healthy young men was flawed and went against Covid-vaccine recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and the American Academy of Pediatrics. The guidance even prompted Twitter to temporarily block a social media post from the surgeon general promoting the analysis, though the company later restored it.

    The inspector general’s office opened the investigation in November after it received the complaint and later closed it an undisclosed date after the complainant didn’t respond to follow-up questions regarding the accusations, according to state documents that include a copy of the original complaint.

    Nothing is known about the complainant, and anyone can submit a grievance with the Department of Health’s inspector general. But the individual appeared to have detailed knowledge of state health agencies, according to the documents the Florida Department of Health provided to POLITICO.

    Ladapo on Wednesday called the accusations against him untrue and said the report in question was completed by a team of staffers at the Florida Department of Health.

    “It’s factually false,” Ladapo said in an interview with POLITICO. “I trust the team — they used our Florida data, they performed the analysis, and we’re an accredited public health organization.”

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis hand-picked Ladapo, a Harvard-educated medical doctor, to be his top health official in 2021. Ladapo has long questioned the safety of Covid-19 vaccines and at one point joined a petition to urge the FDA against quickly authorizing the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. Ladapo found a national audience early in the pandemic by writing opinion pieces in The Wall Street Journal and USA Today that criticized community lockdowns and the use of facemasks.

    The November complaint against Ladapo asked the inspector general to speak with employees at the state Department of Health Communicable Disease Division, who helped write earlier drafts of the report that was eventually released. Emails were kept to a minimum, the complainant wrote, and notes were hand-delivered.

    “You may not find these documents by email, as they get transmitted by hand,” the complainant stated, according to state documents. “But they have been seen by several individuals.

    “Lots of people know about this,” the individual stated.

    Ladapo, however, stood by his Covid guidance and defended his stance on vaccines.

    “Between my scientific experience, and training and the fact that I am only comfortable saying the truth and speaking the truth, I felt completely fine with that announcement,” Ladapo said. “That’s what the data show.”

    Ladapo said experts who have rejected his ideas are unwilling to face what he called honesty in modern medical care.

    “It really strains credulity to try and write this off as being anything but related to the safety of these mRNA Covid vaccines,” Ladapo said. “I think people should know that it’s OK to believe what their eyes are showing them.”

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    #Florida #Surgeon #General #Joe #Ladapo #investigated #allegedly #falsifying #Covid #report
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • In Europe, Biden makes his pitch to be democracy’s general

    In Europe, Biden makes his pitch to be democracy’s general

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    biden us poland 27042

    WARSAW — Eleven months ago, President Joe Biden came to Poland to denounce a war he’d hoped to avoid. On Tuesday, he returned having fully embraced the mantle of wartime leader, boasting of a U.S.-led Western response that blunted Vladimir Putin’s invasion and slowed the march of global authoritarianism.

    Having stood in sunny and free Kyiv the day before — nearly a year after the war began — Biden in Warsaw was steeled for a fight he intends to see through while in the Oval Office. He may not be commanding troops in this battle, but he is acting like democracy’s civilian general, commanding an alliance strung together by geography, fear and necessity.

    “NATO is more united and more unified than ever before,” Biden said. “The democracies of the world have grown stronger, not weaker. The autocrats of the world have grown weaker, not stronger.”

    The feeling behind those words reflected the long-held views of a devout transatlanticist, a man who was 3 years old when World War II ended. Biden grew up in an era of American military and economic domination bolstered by partners across the Atlantic. The mission to safeguard Europe from tyranny since the 1940s has expanded worldwide, leading the United States to defend the “rules-based international order” it created against those opposed to free markets and free societies.

    A fortification of that order, maintained through the sanctity of alliances, is central to the president’s entire foreign policy. And the war in Ukraine for Biden is a test of whether the U.S. is, in some respects, the nation of yesteryear. Can it stand for something, inspire and lead? Can it still be a force for good? Can it prolong global democracy’s flickering flame?

    The president held that the answers to those questions were yes, yes and yes.

    “When Russia invaded, it wasn’t just Ukraine being tested. The whole world faced a test for the ages,” Biden said. “Europe was being tested. America was being tested. NATO was being tested. All democracies were being tested. And the questions we face are as simple as they are profound: Would we respond, or would we look the other way?”

    “One year later, we know the answer: We did respond. We would be strong, we would be united, and the world would not look the other way.”

    To celebrate the 75th anniversary of the alliance, Biden also announced the United States will host the NATO summit next year.

    Hours before the speech, national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters Biden wanted to stand in Europe to affirm “what is at stake here is more than just the success and survival of the nation of Ukraine, but the rules-based international order, the fundamental principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity and the fundamental values of independence, democracy, freedom that matter so much to everyday American people.”

    “The president has believed passionately in the themes … for decades,” Sullivan said, applying them now at what Biden terms “an inflection point in history.”

    Biden’s allies say he struck the right notes both in Ukraine and Poland. “The president’s address makes clear to Russia and other aggressors watching how steep the price will be for those who threaten freedom and democracy,” said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), who chairs the Foreign Relations Committee’s Europe panel.

    Despite the somber reason for his visit to Kyiv — the one-year anniversary of Russian troops, tanks, warplanes and missiles crossing into Ukraine — Biden displayed a joyous bounce as he wandered through the city. He stood alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy even as air-raid sirens blared throughout the capital, a reminder that Russia still holds 20 percent of Ukraine and threatens nearly all of it with its weapons, terrorizing civilians daily. It was the first time a modern-day president traveled to a warzone the U.S. military didn’t control.

    Biden’s lifted spirit drew from the symbolism of his lengthy and clandestine journey on “Rail Force One.” He was there as a physical representation of America’s continued commitment to Ukraine — “as long as it takes,” is his mantra — and rebuke to Putin. The Kremlin boss has unleashed war criminals, mercenaries and conscripts to unseat Zekenskyy, the same man with whom Biden was coordinating, congratulating and consoling.

    The images beamed around the world were meant to deliver one message: These were two presidents on America’s Presidents’ Day showing a thug what true leadership looked like. It was, after all, only a year ago when Biden, also standing outside Warsaw’s Royal Palace, said that Putin “cannot remain in power.”

    This year, with the palace garden surroundings lit up in blue and yellow and in front of a roaring crowd waving American, Polish and Ukrainian flags, Biden reported that “Kyiv stands strong, it stands proud and it stands free.”

    But with the pageantry ending, and the drama receding, what remains are questions about how Biden can repeat his performance in the year ahead. The fear from within and outside the administration is that a weakened Russia could still deal Biden a setback as the brutal war of attrition drags on.

    Putin, for all his struggles, hit similar notes of confidence, including during his State of the Union speech Tuesday which he moved up to pre-rebut Biden’s Warsaw address. “Step by step, we will accomplish all our tasks carefully and consistently,” he said before falsely accusing the West of starting the war. “We are using force to stop it.” He spiked tensions further by suspending the last-remaining nuclear treaty between the U.S. and Russia, the same one he and Biden extended for five years in 2021.

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken called Putin’s decision “deeply unfortunate and irresponsible.”

    With no end in sight, and no peace deal Ukraine could likely accept, Biden needs European allies to hold strong for months, maybe years. Officials from this continent say they were lucky the winter season was relatively mild, allowing Europeans to withstand high energy prices and cold snaps. But another 365 days of shivers and thinning wallets could see continental voters turn against their governments.

    One of Biden’s audiences was back home: the bipartisan congressional coalition supporting Kyiv has largely held, though isolationist voices in the GOP have grown louder. And, as Biden’s likely reelection bid approaches, polls suggest Americans are cooling on sending money to Kyiv. Biden also aimed, subtly, at Beijing. He suggested China should not increase its aid to Moscow, again framing the generational struggle between democracies and autocracies.

    But it is unclear if the West’s arsenal of democracy can keep up with demand. At the Munich Security Conference, held days before Biden’s trip, European leaders like German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron echoed that their weapons-production lines weren’t humming along as desired for Ukraine’s and their own security. Macron implored Europe “to invest more in defense. If we want peace, we need the means to achieve it.”

    Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.), part of the U.S. congressional delegation to the conference, worried about America’s ability to fill at least part of that gap. “The burn rate is very unsustainable,” he said in an interview there, as Ukrainian troops “are firing more munitions than we can produce. We can’t create, in the short term, a larger pipeline. The industrial base cannot do it.”

    “The way we fix that is we actually train them on fire and maneuver and advanced tactics that use substantially less ammunition to achieve the same or greater result,” the House Armed Services Committee member and veteran said.

    This week also featured some slight cracks in American and European rhetoric regarding Russia. The Biden administration repeats that it seeks Moscow’s “strategic defeat,” depleting it of the resources to sustain a modern economy, an equipped military and system of kleptocracy that keeps Putin in control. But in an interview with a French newspaper this week, Macron called on the West to help Ukraine win the war but not “crush” Russia. That followed his comments last year that Moscow should not be “humiliated over its invasion.”

    Tending to America’s vast and varied allies is paramount for Biden, though there have been missteps along the way. Some allies raged then, and still do now, about his withdrawal from Afghanistan, and France was irate after being cut out of a nuclear submarine deal with Australia.

    But what the president showcased in Poland was lockstep support for the transatlantic bond that undergirds his defense of Ukrainian and global democracy from behind the Resolute Desk.

    “The stakes are eternal,” said Biden. “The choice between chaos and stability, between building and destroying, between hope and fear, between democracy that lifts up the human spirit and the brutal hand of the dictator that crushes it.”



    [ad_2]
    #Europe #Biden #pitch #democracys #general
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • In Europe, Biden makes his pitch to be democracy’s general

    In Europe, Biden makes his pitch to be democracy’s general

    [ad_1]

    biden us poland 27042

    The feeling behind those words reflected the long-held views of a devout transatlanticist, a man who was 3 years old when World War II ended. Biden grew up in an era of American military and economic domination bolstered by partners across the Atlantic. The mission to safeguard Europe from tyranny since the 1940s has expanded worldwide, leading the United States to defend the “rules-based international order” it created against those opposed to free markets and free societies.

    A fortification of that order, maintained through the sanctity of alliances, is central to the president’s entire foreign policy. And the war in Ukraine for Biden is a test of whether the U.S. is, in some respects, the nation of yesteryear. Can it stand for something, inspire and lead? Can it still be a force for good? Can it prolong global democracy’s flickering flame?

    The president held that the answers to those questions were yes, yes and yes.

    “When Russia invaded, it wasn’t just Ukraine being tested. The whole world faced a test for the ages,” Biden said. “Europe was being tested. America was being tested. NATO was being tested. All democracies were being tested. And the questions we face are as simple as they are profound: Would we respond, or would we look the other way?”

    “One year later, we know the answer: We did respond. We would be strong, we would be united, and the world would not look the other way.”

    To celebrate the 75th anniversary of the alliance, Biden also announced the United States will host the NATO summit next year.

    Hours before the speech, national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters Biden wanted to stand in Europe to affirm “what is at stake here is more than just the success and survival of the nation of Ukraine, but the rules-based international order, the fundamental principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity and the fundamental values of independence, democracy, freedom that matter so much to everyday American people.”

    “The president has believed passionately in the themes … for decades,” Sullivan said, applying them now at what Biden terms “an inflection point in history.”

    Biden’s allies say he struck the right notes both in Ukraine and Poland. “The president’s address makes clear to Russia and other aggressors watching how steep the price will be for those who threaten freedom and democracy,” said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), who chairs the Foreign Relations Committee’s Europe panel.

    Despite the somber reason for his visit to Kyiv — the one-year anniversary of Russian troops, tanks, warplanes and missiles crossing into Ukraine — Biden displayed a joyous bounce as he wandered through the city. He stood alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy even as air-raid sirens blared throughout the capital, a reminder that Russia still holds 20 percent of Ukraine and threatens nearly all of it with its weapons, terrorizing civilians daily. It was the first time a modern-day president traveled to a warzone the U.S. military didn’t control.

    Biden’s lifted spirit drew from the symbolism of his lengthy and clandestine journey on “Rail Force One.” He was there as a physical representation of America’s continued commitment to Ukraine — “as long as it takes,” is his mantra — and rebuke to Putin. The Kremlin boss has unleashed war criminals, mercenaries and conscripts to unseat Zekenskyy, the same man with whom Biden was coordinating, congratulating and consoling.

    The images beamed around the world were meant to deliver one message: These were two presidents on America’s Presidents’ Day showing a thug what true leadership looked like. It was, after all, only a year ago when Biden, also standing outside Warsaw’s Royal Palace, said that Putin “cannot remain in power.”

    This year, with the palace garden surroundings lit up in blue and yellow and in front of a roaring crowd waving American, Polish and Ukrainian flags, Biden reported that “Kyiv stands strong, it stands proud and it stands free.”

    But with the pageantry ending, and the drama receding, what remains are questions about how Biden can repeat his performance in the year ahead. The fear from within and outside the administration is that a weakened Russia could still deal Biden a setback as the brutal war of attrition drags on.

    Putin, for all his struggles, hit similar notes of confidence, including during his State of the Union speech Tuesday which he moved up to pre-rebut Biden’s Warsaw address. “Step by step, we will accomplish all our tasks carefully and consistently,” he said before falsely accusing the West of starting the war. “We are using force to stop it.” He spiked tensions further by suspending the last-remaining nuclear treaty between the U.S. and Russia, the same one he and Biden extended for five years in 2021.

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken called Putin’s decision “deeply unfortunate and irresponsible.”

    With no end in sight, and no peace deal Ukraine could likely accept, Biden needs European allies to hold strong for months, maybe years. Officials from this continent say they were lucky the winter season was relatively mild, allowing Europeans to withstand high energy prices and cold snaps. But another 365 days of shivers and thinning wallets could see continental voters turn against their governments.

    One of Biden’s audiences was back home: the bipartisan congressional coalition supporting Kyiv has largely held, though isolationist voices in the GOP have grown louder. And, as Biden’s likely reelection bid approaches, polls suggest Americans are cooling on sending money to Kyiv. Biden also aimed, subtly, at Beijing. He suggested China should not increase its aid to Moscow, again framing the generational struggle between democracies and autocracies.

    But it is unclear if the West’s arsenal of democracy can keep up with demand. At the Munich Security Conference, held days before Biden’s trip, European leaders like German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron echoed that their weapons-production lines weren’t humming along as desired for Ukraine’s and their own security. Macron implored Europe “to invest more in defense. If we want peace, we need the means to achieve it.”

    Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.), part of the U.S. congressional delegation to the conference, worried about America’s ability to fill at least part of that gap. “The burn rate is very unsustainable,” he said in an interview there, as Ukrainian troops “are firing more munitions than we can produce. We can’t create, in the short term, a larger pipeline. The industrial base cannot do it.”

    “The way we fix that is we actually train them on fire and maneuver and advanced tactics that use substantially less ammunition to achieve the same or greater result,” the House Armed Services Committee member and veteran said.

    This week also featured some slight cracks in American and European rhetoric regarding Russia. The Biden administration repeats that it seeks Moscow’s “strategic defeat,” depleting it of the resources to sustain a modern economy, an equipped military and system of kleptocracy that keeps Putin in control. But in an interview with a French newspaper this week, Macron called on the West to help Ukraine win the war but not “crush” Russia. That followed his comments last year that Moscow should not be “humiliated over its invasion.”

    Tending to America’s vast and varied allies is paramount for Biden, though there have been missteps along the way. Some allies raged then, and still do now, about his withdrawal from Afghanistan, and France was irate after being cut out of a nuclear submarine deal with Australia.

    But what the president showcased in Poland was lockstep support for the transatlantic bond that undergirds his defense of Ukrainian and global democracy from behind the Resolute Desk.

    “The stakes are eternal,” said Biden. “The choice between chaos and stability, between building and destroying, between hope and fear, between democracy that lifts up the human spirit and the brutal hand of the dictator that crushes it.”



    [ad_2]
    #Europe #Biden #pitch #democracys #general
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Directorate General of Employment Training/Courses.

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    Directorate General of Employment Training/Courses.

    Applications are invited from eligible SC/ST jobseekers for (1) Special Coaching (2) ‘O’ level One year Software training (3) ‘O’ level Computer Hardware Maintenance training (CHM) (4) Office Automation, Accounting and Publishing Assistant (5) Computer Application and Business Accounting Associate (6) Cyber Secured Web Development Associate Programme which is likely to commence from 01.07.2023.

    National Career Service Centre for SC/STS offers the following courses free of cost for SC/STS job seekers at various locations. During the course period, the candidate is entitled for the stipend @Rs. 1000 per month.

    The detail of eligibility criteria for training programmes is given as under.

    S. No.Name of the coursesDuration of the courseAge limitMinimum QualificationFamily IncomeBooks & StationeryLikely to be commenced
    1.Special Coaching SchemeOne Year18-27 years (as on 01.07.2023)10+2Rs. 3.00 lakh per annum.Free01.07.2023
    2‘O’ Level one year computer training through NIELITOne Year18- 30 years (as on 01.07.2023)10+2Rs. 3.00 lakh per annumFree01.07.2023
    3.‘O’ Level Computer Hardware maintenance training through NIELITOne Year18-30 years (as on 01.07. 2023)10+2Rs 3.00 lakh per annumFree01.07.2023
    4.Office Automation Accounting and Publishing Assistant through NIELITSix Months18-30 years (as on 01.07.2023)10+2Rs. 3.00 lakh per annumFree01.07.2023
    5.Computer Application and Business Accounting Associate through NIELITOne Year18-30 years (as on 01.07.2023)10+2Rs. 3.00 lakh per annumFree01.07.2023
    6.Cyber Secured Web Development Associate Through NIELITOne Year18-30 years (as on 01.07.2023)10+2Rs. 3.00 lakh per annumFree01.07.2023

    How to apply: Desirous SC/STs job seekers may visit www.ncs.gov.in or www.dge.gov.in and submit their application to the National Career Service Centre for SC/STs where the candidate is interested for participating in the above-said program.

    Last date: Last date for submission of application to NCSC for SC/STS is 30.04.2023.

    Candidates would be considered for only one course. The candidates may indicate their choice of courses in order of their preferences.

    Address: Government of India, Shram Shakti Bhawan, Rafi Marg, New Delhi-110001

     

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    ( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • F-16s, longer-range missiles could help Ukraine beat Russia, U.S. general privately tells lawmakers

    F-16s, longer-range missiles could help Ukraine beat Russia, U.S. general privately tells lawmakers

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    The general’s answer goes further than previous public comments by top national security officials, who have said they haven’t ruled out sending fighter jets in the future, but also note that air defenses are the most urgent current need.

    Cavoli told the lawmakers at the Munich Security Conference that the U.S. and its allies should send the most advanced weapons they can part with to Ukraine. That included advanced aircraft, drones and missiles with ranges over 62 miles (100 kilometers), such as the Army Tactical Missile System. Those weapons would do a better job positioning Kyiv to repel Moscow’s troops, Cavoli said.

    The general, who serves as both the supreme allied commander for Europe and as head of U.S. European Command, argued that Ukraine needs more advanced weapons and equipment to “enhance the deep fight,” per one of five people. A second person said Cavoli believes the West should equip Ukraine to “reach further” into Russian positions within Ukraine’s border.

    A spokesperson for the general didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    The remarks come as the transatlantic debate on whether to provide Kyiv with advanced aircraft has intensified.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has long called for fighter jets, arguing that Ukrainian pilots are skilled enough to train on Western-made warplanes and control the skies despite Russia’s air defenses. But President Joe Biden and some European leaders have so far rebuffed that request, saying that the provision of tanks and artillery are more important for the current phase of the war.

    That stance has frustrated advocates of providing Ukraine with whatever the U.S. can afford to hand over. “The F-16s are an absolute must,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told reporters on the sidelines of the conference. He accused the White House of being “slow on everything,” adding, “what you saw with the tanks is going to happen with the jets.”

    On Thursday, a bipartisan group of lawmakers sent a letter to Biden urging him to send F-16s right away, POLITICO reported.

    Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), who met with Cavoli and Ukrainian leaders in Munich, said he supports identifying Ukrainian pilots and maintenance crews and bringing them to the United States for training.

    “It is the right thing to do to come up with a plan to identify personnel to be trained, along with the maintainers and develop a syllabus” on how to operate and repair the complex fourth-generation fighter plane. Kelly was not one of the five people who confirmed that Cavoli discussed sending more advanced weapons.

    Kelly, a retired Navy pilot with combat experience, added that Ukrainians are interested in using the warplane to hit Russian air defense systems from far away, which would then allow other aircraft and drones to operate more freely across the country, particularly in the east and south where the fighting is concentrated.

    The British government promised to train Ukrainians on NATO-standard aircraft, but didn’t provide a timeline for when or if London would send those warplanes eastward.

    “The first step in being able to provide advanced aircrafts is to have soldiers or aviators who are capable of using them,” U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said last week while standing alongside Zelenskyy. “We need to make sure they are able to operate the aircraft they might eventually be using.”

    Both American and British officials continue to say that nothing is off the table.

    Slovakia, meanwhile, is in talks with Ukraine about sending MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine. “The Ukrainian president asked me to deliver the MiGs. Now, because this official request has come, the process of negotiations can be started,” Slovakian Prime Minister Eduard Heger said last week. “Our MiGs can save innocent lives in Ukraine.”

    Cavoli spoke with his Ukrainian counterpart this week about what other military aid Kyiv needs. Also this week, allies started training Ukrainian troops on Leopard 2 and other tanks that Germany in January approved to be sent.

    Any new, modern capability the Ukrainians receive will have a major impact on the fighting this year. Russian forces have stalled out in Donbas, launching costly attacks on Ukrainian lines that can be measured in feet rather than miles, and their poorly trained conscripts- and prisoners-turned-soldiers are struggling.

    “The Russians will try to launch an offensive” this spring, a NATO official said on the sidelines of the gathering. “I don’t know how effective they’re going to be. I don’t know how much different it’s going to look than what everything else has looked like. … I don’t know what else they can do.”

    That doesn’t mean the Ukrainians will have an easy go of it.

    “People need to be aware that this is going to be a long fight,” the official said. “This is a war. This is not a crisis. This is not some small incident somewhere that can be managed. This is not a skirmish. This is an all-out war.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )