Tag: Good

  • Good News For Bank Customers! Now More Than 8% Interest

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    1. Good news for bank customers! Now more than 8% interest will be available on FD

    IndusInd Bank has increased the interest rates on fixed deposits of less than Rs 2 crore. According to the bank’s website, the new rates will be applicable from February 16, 2023.

    IndusInd Bank has increased the interest rates on fixed deposits of less than Rs 2 crore. According to the bank’s website, the new rates will be applicable from February 16, 2023. After this increase, common depositors will now get interest up to a maximum rate of 7.5 per cent. At the same time, senior citizens can earn up to 8.25 percent interest rate in the bank.

     

    What are the new interest rates on FD?

     

    According to the website of IndusInd Bank, the bank will now get interest at the rate of 3.50 per cent on fixed deposits maturing between 7 and 30 days.

    At the same time, the bank will have 4.00 percent interest rate on fixed deposits with a period between 31 days and 45 days.

    Whereas, interest will be at the rate of 4.50% on FDs with tenure ranging from 46 days to 60 days. On the other hand, interest will be given at the rate of 4.60 percent on FDs with maturity of 61 days and 90 days.

     

    On the other hand, the interest rate on fixed deposits with maturity of 91 days and 120 days has gone up to 4.75 per cent. Interest will be available at the rate of 5.00 percent on FDs of 121 days to 180 days in this private bank. At the same time, the interest rate on fixed deposits between 181 days and 210 days has been increased to 5.75 percent. The bank will have an interest rate of 5.80 per cent on fixed deposits with maturity between 211 days and 269 days.

     

    Customers will get so much benefit

    At the same time, the interest rate on FDs maturing between 270 days and 354 days in IndusInd Bank will be 6 percent. On the other hand, FDs between 355 days and 364 days will now get interest at the rate of 6.75 per cent. The interest rate on fixed deposits with a tenure between 355 days and 364 days in the bank has been increased to 6.25 percent. Whereas, interest will be given at the rate of 7% on FDs of one year to one year and six months. FDs with tenure ranging from one year and six months to two years will have an interest rate of 7.25 per cent.

     

    Let us tell you that the Reserve Bank of India i.e. RBI had announced an increase of 25 basis points in the repo rate in its monetary policy meeting on 8 February. After this, SBI had increased the interest rates on select fixed deposits by up to 25 basis points.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Opinion | NASA Refused to Cancel James Webb. Good.

    Opinion | NASA Refused to Cancel James Webb. Good.

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    Kameny’s story is worth revisiting in light of a recent controversy concerning the legacy of the Lavender Scare within the space program. Late last year, NASA announced that it would not reverse its decision to name its deep-space telescope after James Webb, the administrator who led the agency throughout the 1960s. The announcement came after years of lobbying by a group of young scientists who claimed that Webb, first as a high-ranking State Department official during the Truman administration and then as NASA chief, had been complicit in the firing of gay employees while serving at both agencies. A petition demanding NASA rename the telescope earned nearly 2,000 signatures, and the Royal Astronomical Society in Britain insisted that astronomers submitting papers to its journals use the acronym “JWST” when describing the telescope, Webb’s disrepute reducing him to the level of the fictional Lord Voldemort, “He Who Must Not Be Named.”

    Webb’s contributions to the cause of space exploration were vast. Taking the reins of NASA at the outset of the John F. Kennedy administration, he spearheaded the Apollo program that fulfilled the president’s mission of landing a man on the moon by the end of the decade. And while he stands accused of purging gay people from NASA, Webb put the agency at the forefront of government efforts on behalf of another marginalized minority. Under Webb’s direction, NASA was the leading federal agency to promote racial integration, aggressively recruiting and promoting Black scientists. In 1964, when Alabama’s segregationist governor George Wallace attempted to block the hiring of African-Americans at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Webb threatened to remove personnel from the facility. That same year, he declined to speak at the Jackson, Mississippi Chamber of Commerce after two Black activists were denied entry to the event.

    In March 2021, NASA assigned its chief historian to investigate the claim that Webb was responsible for the firing of gay employees. In an 89-page report released late last year, for which he surveyed some 50,000 documents spanning a 20-year period, the historian found no evidence to substantiate this allegation. On the contrary, at least during his tenure at State, Webb could actually be credited with reducing the damage wreaked by the Lavender Scare. The crusade to cleanse the federal government of “sexual deviants” was led by Senator Joe McCarthy, who blamed “communists and queers” at the State Department for a series of early Cold War setbacks. According to the report, as under secretary of state, Webb’s “main involvement” in this episode “was in attempting to limit Congressional access to the personnel records of the Department of State” by claiming executive branch privilege over personnel matters. As for his time at NASA, though Webb presided over the agency when a budget analyst fired on account of his homosexuality, Clifford Norton, sued the Civil Service Commission, according to the NASA historian, “No evidence has been located showing Webb knew of Norton’s firing at the time.” Citing this study, the Royal Astronomical Society announced last month that it would no longer require authors to use the abbreviation “JWST.”

    The NASA investigation absolving Webb is a welcome contribution to the historical record. But it also obscures several important points about the severity of the Lavender Scare. For even if Webb cannot be tied to the dismissal of an individual gay employee, he occupied positions of authority in a government that was firing gay people left and right. While Webb may not have been aware of Norton’s situation, there were surely many more gay NASA employees who were terminated yet whose cases received less attention because, unlike Norton, they did not want to assume the risk to their reputations that going public with a lawsuit would entail. “It is highly likely that [Webb] knew exactly what was happening with security at his own agency during the height of the Cold War,” four leaders of the campaign to wipe Webb’s name from the telescope wrote last year. “We are deeply concerned by the implication that managers are not responsible for homophobia.”

    And yet, no matter how well-intentioned, to single out a bureaucrat like James Webb for the Lavender Scare would accomplish the opposite of what it intends by minimizing just how vast and ruthless was our country’s policy of anti-gay discrimination — a policy so vast and ruthless that it mandated the outlay of massive amounts of money and manpower in a whole-of-government effort aimed at firing patriotic and highly-educated employees just because of whom they loved. If Webb’s level of involvement in this decades-long purge is to be the threshold by which we cancel an historical figure, then we are going to have to rename everything named after pretty much anyone who served a role in the federal government from 1947 (when the State Department began firing gay employees) until at least 1975 (when the Civil Service Commission lifted its ban on gays), or even 1995 (when Clinton removed homosexuality as a cause for denying a security clearance). Every president, cabinet officer, deputy assistant secretary of housing — all were in some sense complicit in the structural oppression of gay people that existed during the second half of the 20th century.

    Ultimately, the primary argument against renaming the James Webb Space Telescope is the same argument against renaming buildings and other landmarks honoring historical figures — George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln — who espoused views that we rightly consider abhorrent by today’s standards, which is that these men also accomplished great things deserving of our recognition and praise. To argue otherwise, to contend that there is nothing worth venerating about morally complex individuals from our past, is to fall victim to presentism, the narcissistic penchant for imagining oneself morally superior to those who came before.

    Those defending Webb have faced blowback themselves. In January 2021, Dr. Hakeem Oluseyi, the president of the National Society of Black Physicists, published the results of his own investigation exonerating Webb from the charge of homophobic bigotry. Later that year, after Oluseyi was hired by George Mason University, a leader of the anti-Webb campaign tweeted that he had championed a “homophobe.”

    According to the New York Times, that July, a professor at another university told an astronomy professor at George Mason that Oluseyi had sexually harassed a woman and mishandled a government grant. (Officials at Oluseyi’s former employer, the Florida Institute of Technology, launched an investigation and found nothing to substantiate the charges.) Last year, while Times reporter Michael Powell was working on an article about the Webb controversy, he received accusations from an anonymous person about Oluseyi. “Several of these claims were demonstrably false, and others could not be substantiated,” Powell wrote.

    The debate over whether NASA should honor the legacy of James Webb offers us an opportunity to consider how best to commemorate a dark episode in our nation’s past. While our country has made valiant efforts at atoning for its abhorrent treatment of other minorities, we have barely begun the process of recognizing the oppression its gay and lesbian citizens endured. I cannot think of a better way for NASA to do this than to name its next space telescope after Frank Kameny.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Employees Holiday 2023: Good news for employees

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    Employees Holiday 2023: Good news for employees, announcement of public holiday, offices will remain closed, will get benefits

    Employees-students will get the benefit of public holiday on 27th February. Under this, all government employees registered as voters in the constituency will be given leave with salary on the day of election. In this regard, notification has been made by the Department of Personnel, Administrative Reforms and Official Language.


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    Employees Holiday 2023: There is good news for government employees. You will get the benefit of leave in February. February 27 has been declared a government holiday in all educational institutions and government offices due to the by-elections to be held in Erode East, Tamil Nadu. This has been announced by the Government of Tamil Nadu. Under this, all government employees registered as voters in the constituency will be given leave with salary on the day of election. In this regard, notification has been made by the Department of Personnel, Administrative Reforms and Official Language.

    Public holiday even on Valentine’s Day

    Today, February 14, Valentine’s Day has been declared a public holiday in West Bengal. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee says that the holiday has been declared not for Valentine’s Day but in view of the birth anniversary of social reformer and dynasty leader Panchanan Varma. Schools and colleges including offices will remain closed due to public holiday.

    Holiday in Ramgarh on February 27

    Jharkhand’s Ramgarh assembly constituency has declared a public holiday due to the by-elections to be held on February 27. Information has also been issued for this. During this, industrial establishments, government offices and public banks will be closed. At the same time, it will benefit the employees. The Hemant Soren government of the state has declared a local public holiday under Section 25 of the Instrument Act 1881.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Why World Bank head’s resignation is good news for climate crisis fight

    Why World Bank head’s resignation is good news for climate crisis fight

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    The resignation of David Malpass, president of the World Bank, was greeted with relief and joy on Wednesday evening by climate experts and campaigners, who said it should open up a new era for financing the global shift to a low-carbon economy.

    Malpass, who was appointed to the role by the then US president Donald Trump in 2019, had been facing mounting calls to step down after a series of missteps, including lacklustre plans for green investment, and appearing to deny climate science when confronted by a journalist.

    In a statement, Malpass said the World Bank Group, which provides investment and finance to alleviate poverty and build services and infrastructure in developing countries, was “fundamentally strong, financially sustainable, and well-positioned to increase its development impact in the face of urgent global crises” and that he would “pursue new challenges”.

    His departure, which will take place on 30 June to give time to find a successor, should herald sweeping reform of the bank and its sister institutions to focus much more on the climate crisis, experts said. Al Gore, former US vice-president, said: “Humankind needs the head of the World Bank to fully recognise and creatively respond to the civilisation-threatening danger posed by the climate crisis. I am very happy to hear that new leadership is coming. This must be the first step towards true reform that places the climate crisis at the centre of the bank’s work.”

    Developing countries have grown increasingly frustrated with the paucity of World Bank funds available for their pursuit of clean energy and to help them adapt to the impacts of extreme weather. Donor nations were also grumbling and pushing for reform, impatient with the bank’s slow progress in delivering a comprehensive climate plan.

    Jake Schmidt, strategic director for climate at the US Natural Resources Defense Council, said: “Malpass’s departure allows the World Bank to hit the reset button and finally commit to the leadership needed in the climate finance space. The world needs more and better climate finance to meet the scale of the climate crisis and the needs of developing countries. With new leadership, the World Bank now needs to rapidly evolve, as a growing chorus of countries and experts have been urging.”

    Calls for Malpass’s resignation gathered strength after an incident last September, on the fringes of the UN general assembly, when a New York Times journalist asked him on stage to confirm his acceptance of climate science. He fumbled for words and refused to validate climate science. Although he later attempted to clarify his position and insisted he was not a climate denier, the impression had been clearly given and his leadership irrevocably damaged.

    Then at the Cop27 UN climate summit last November, arriving late after the plane he was on was hit by lightning, Malpass flew into another storm. Mia Mottley, prime minister of Barbados, spearheaded a carefully coordinated attempt to gather international backing for a new global system of climate finance, with a reformed World Bank at its centre.

    The World Bank and its subsidiaries were set up under the Bretton Woods framework, developed by the allies of the second world war in 1944. Mottley told world leaders: “Institutions crafted in the mid-20th century cannot be effective in the third decade of the 21st century. They do not describe 21st-century issues. Climate justice was not an issue then [when the bank was set up].”

    Some of the criticisms of the World Bank are that its climate spending is too small, too scattered, uncoordinated and badly targeted, and hard to access by the poorest countries. The bank has also continued to fund fossil fuel projects, despite claiming to phase it out. According to data published last year, the bank has provided $15bn to fossil fuel projects since the Paris agreement was signed in 2015.

    Mottley, whose country is one of the many small island states at gravest risk from the climate crisis, was cheered and feted at Cop27, and country after country came forward to support her plans. World leaders including France’s Emmanuel Macron, Germany’s Olaf Scholtz, Rishi Sunak of the UK and the US climate envoy John Kerry discussed what reform could look like.

    Malpass, when he finally arrived, could only reiterate that his leadership was delivering a record $32bn (£26bn) for climate finance – sums derided as falling far short of the hundreds of billions and even trillions needed for the green transition.

    Yet reform of the World Bank need not involve vast new expenditure by developed country donors, according to its former chief economist Nicholas Stern. He estimates that because of the structure of the bank’s capitalisation, investment of about $9bn from developed countries over several years could enable it to raise about half of the $2.4tn a year he calculates will be required in total climate finance by 2030, to put the world on a low-carbon path.

    “These sums are not scary,” Lord Stern told the Guardian at Cop27. “They are about 5% more than the current investment [much of which goes to fossil fuels and high-carbon infrastructure]. We could, if we wanted to, get started quickly.”

    Mottley is expected to set out her proposals, known as the Bridgetown Agenda, in some detail in the coming weeks, to be discussed by world governments before the spring meetings of the World Bank Group in April. Then in late June, Macron will hold a climate finance summit in Paris, by which time – if nations can keep up their constructive spirit – the new plans may be ready to start putting into action.

    By then, a new World Bank president should be ready to take over. Since the Bretton Woods institutions were set up, that appointment has always been made by the US president, while European leaders choose the head of the International Monetary Fund. Some developing countries would like to see that convention reformed, too, and have a global competition to find a new president – but that might be a step too far for Malpass’s successor.

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    #World #Bank #heads #resignation #good #news #climate #crisis #fight
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Employees Salary Payment: Good News For Employees! Payment

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    Employees Salary Payment: There is good news for the employees. Actually soon they will be paid salary. In this regard, the High Court gave important instructions to the institution. The High Court has said in its order that the employees should be paid their salaries by February 15. In such a situation, the salary will be paid to the employees till February 15.


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    Payment of salary by 15 February

    Earlier, the salary matter of the employees was heard by the Kerala High Court. In which it was said that before the court, KSRTC had given a little ruling that the salary would be paid to the employees by February 15. At the beginning of the same month, a petition demanding payment of salaries to the employees was presented in the court. In which the court orally said that if KSRTC is not able to pay the salaries of the employees on time then it should be closed.

    42000 pensioners including 26000 employees will be affected

    KSRTC employees have been continuously appealing to the government for the demand of salary payment for a long time. On the other hand, KSRTC’s lawyer Deepu Thakan, while presenting the argument, said that the salary will be paid to the employees by February 15 of the last month. He also said that if the corporation is closed, it will affect 42000 pensioners including 26000 employees.

    Apart from this, more than 20,000 passengers will also be affected by this. Infact more than 20,000 commuters depend on KSRTC service for their travel. In such a situation, if the institution is closed, then the employees and pensioners along with the common citizens may also have to bear a big loss.

    High court order

    While hearing the matter, the High Court has clarified that the salary and pension should be paid by KSRTC to its employees on time. There is no need for such an institution which cannot pay its employees and pensioners. Also, if the passengers also have to go through its effect, then they can use other means of transport. At the same time, after the order of the court, it is believed that the amount can be seen in the account of the employees till February 15.

    Earlier, while submitting an affidavit, KSRTC had also said that it is making efforts to increase the daily revenue by 8 digits. It is expected that the corporation will soon achieve its target. In this way the salary will be paid to the employees in the first week of the month itself. However, it was also stated that till the Corporation does not achieve the daily revenue target, it is not in a position to make any commitment before the High Court with regard to the organization of salary for the first week of every month.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Good News: New 720 JKPSI Posts Forwarded To JKSSB

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    Good News: New 720 JKPSI Posts Forwarded To JKSSB , Check Details Here

    752 vacancies of Sub-inspectors in police department has been forwarded to JKSSB



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    752 vacancies of Sub-inspectors in police department has been forwarded to JKSSB

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Biden’s Super Bowl interview appears off — for good

    Biden’s Super Bowl interview appears off — for good

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    But brinkmanship between the president’s team and the media giant stretched for days and then hours heading into the weekend of the big game. It started Friday morning when the White House announced that an interview with Fox Soul — which came as a surprise to many — had been scrapped for good.

    “The President was looking forward to an interview with Fox Soul to discuss the Super Bowl, the State of the Union, and critical issues impacting the everyday lives of Black Americans,” press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a tweet. “We’ve been informed that Fox Corp. has asked for the interview to be cancelled.”

    Hours later, Fox Corp. issued a statement citing “some initial confusion” the night before, but concluding that Fox Soul still looked forward to hosting the interview.

    But by Friday evening — a point by which presidents and TV networks traditionally record Super Bowl interviews ahead of the Sunday program — a White House official informed POLITICO that nothing had changed since providing the earlier comments.

    “FOX has since put out a statement indicating the interview was rescheduled, which is inaccurate,” the White House official said. While the person did not elaborate, Biden was not expected to conduct a Super Bowl interview of any kind.

    The saga comes after initial talks fell apart between the White House and Fox News, the company’s highly-rated network. Earlier this week, a Fox anchor said the White House had ghosted the network. In the days that followed, Fox representatives confirmed that productive discussions were effectively over.

    White House officials declined to provide specifics on why their outreach to Fox stopped. Fox’s Bret Baier was viewed as the most likely anchor from the news and conservative opinion network to land the president. Biden sat down in previous years with news anchors from NBC and CBS.

    The decision not to have Biden tangle with one of Fox News’ top anchors means the White House was willing to sacrifice a massive pre-game audience on Sunday to which the president could share his message. But it also suggests the White House was unwilling to reward a network that houses prime-time hosts who mercilessly assail the administration and Democrats.

    Instead, Biden’s team worked on landing an agreement with Fox Soul, a streaming outfit part of Fox’s TV stations division and geared toward a Black audience. White House officials had arranged for the interview to be conducted by Fox Sports host Mike Hill and actress Vivica A. Fox. Fox Soul general manager James DuBose had planned to produce the interview. All three flew Friday from Los Angeles to Washington for the interview.

    The White House seeking out Fox Soul was seen as a way to have the president avoid appearing with a Fox News personality while still going through with an interview. Biden has yet to sit for an interview with Fox News, making a different calculation than his former boss, Barack Obama. While the Obama White House is remembered for icing Fox News journalists — leading other networks to offer their solidarity — Obama did sit for a pair of pre-game interviews with former Fox host Bill O’Reilly.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • It will be good if people respond positively to celebrate Feb 14 as ‘Cow Hug Day’: Rupala

    It will be good if people respond positively to celebrate Feb 14 as ‘Cow Hug Day’: Rupala

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    New Delhi: Union Minister Parshottam Rupala on Thursday said it will be good if people respond positively to the call given by the Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) to celebrate February 14 as Cow Hug Day’.

    Rupala, who is Minister of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying, said nothing much should be read into the choice of February 14 as a date for this purpose.

    February 14 is observed as Valentine’s Day across the world.

    “This country has an age-old tradition of worshipping the cow and it is a matter of great happiness that people embrace the cow It is good if people respond positively to our appeal,” the minister told reporters.

    Since February 14 is a day of love, it is good if people remember and love the cow on that day. “And if someone taunts on this, then one should not feel angry but feel pity…,” he added.

    It is for the first time, AWBI — a statutory advisory body on animal welfare laws, has appealed to cow lovers in the country to celebrate ‘Cow Hug day’.

    The Board noted that the appeal has been made because the vedic traditions are almost on the “verge of extinction” due to the progress of western culture.

    The Board, established in 1962 under Section 4 of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, provides grants to animal welfare organisations and advises the Centre on animal welfare issues.

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    #good #people #respond #positively #celebrate #Feb #Cow #Hug #Day #Rupala

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Luke Skywalker: I’m Zelenskyy’s ‘good soldier’

    Luke Skywalker: I’m Zelenskyy’s ‘good soldier’

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    “Attention. The air alert is over. May the force be with you.”

    That voice reading that message, heard on the English version of an app signaling the end of Russian air raids over Ukraine, belongs to Luke Skywalker (well, the actor Mark Hamill).

    The app received a Star Wars-themed update last year, just one of several actions that Hamill has taken to support Ukraine in its fight against Vladimir Putin’s “evil empire.”

    In an exclusive interview with POLITICO, Hamill said that his position as an ambassador for the fundraising platform United24’s “Army of Drones” project is the most important role he’s ever played.

    “I’m an actor, I deal in illusion and fantasy,” he said from his house in Malibu, California. “I’m like a modern-day court jester.” But the role helping Ukraine “is much more meaningful than what I’m used to doing. And I’m happy to do it.”

    Moreover, Hamill said he is not only an ambassador but a “good soldier” and would do anything that Volodymyr Zelenskyy (or his fundraising team) asks him to do. “I follow orders,” Hamill said.

    POLITICO revealed last week that Hamill is selling signed posters to raise cash for maintaining the Ukrainian army’s drone supply. It really is the return of the Jedi — Hamill revealed he hasn’t sold autographed items since 2017, when “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” came out. “It’s just not something I do,” he said. The posters are expected to arrive in Kyiv and go on sale any day now.

    The “Army of Drones” project for which Hamill is an ambassador involves drone procurement and maintenance, as well as pilot training, with the drones used to monitor the front line.

    It is a joint venture between the Ukrainian Armed Forces, the Ministry of Digital Transformation and the fundraising platform United24, which was set up by Zelenskyy and has so far raised more than €252 million.

    “Drones are so vital in this conflict. They are the eyes in the sky. They protect the border, they monitor,” Hamill said, adding that Russia is using drones to attack civilians while Ukraine uses them as reconnaissance support to gather information.

    The actor said he was “honored” that Zelenskyy personally asked him to come on board. “I’m not used to being contacted by world leaders,” he said.

    But he is used to taking a political stand.

    Referring to himself as a “life-long Democrat,” Hamill is very vocal on Twitter with his support of the U.S. Democrats and has critcized former President Donald Trump.

    “Every Democrat that asked me to help them in their campaigns, doing Zooms and appearances … I said yes to all of them,” Hamill said, before adding proudly that he once received a letter from President Joe Biden, although: “I follow him on Twitter, but he doesn’t follow me back.”

    But at the moment Hamill’s political focus is on Ukraine, and he said he feels “obligated” to do everything that Zelenskyy’s fundraising team asks him to do, “however small it is.”

    Zelenskyy thanked Hamill with a virtual meeting, in which the president said: “The light will win over darkness. I believe in this, our people believe in this.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Telangana a teaching point of country in good governance-Minister KTR

    Telangana a teaching point of country in good governance-Minister KTR

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    Hyderabad: Telangana which is not even 10 years old has become a beacon for the whole country today and the state which became a teaching point of movements during yesteryears has now become teaching and talking point for the nation with the good governance practices, Minister KT Rama said on Saturday.

    Replying to a debate on the motion of thanks to the Governor’s address in the Assembly, Rama Rao narrated the state’s achievements while slamming the NDA government at the Centre for its alleged “anti-people” policies.

    “When the Centre is trying to fix meters on farmers’ pumpsets and keep them away from the agriculture sector, the state government is giving free power to them and saving the farm sector,” he said.

    He said the BRS government has given eight lakh new agriculture connections during the past eight years.

    After the formation of Telangana state in 2014, till now the government has spent Rs 1, 46,000 crore on large and medium irrigation projects.

    Before the formation of the state, the expenditure on irrigation projects in 10 years was only Rs 38,405 crore and after the formation of Telangana, 74.32 lakh acres got irrigation facility,” he said.

    “Our aim is to irrigate another 51 lakh acres in the next three years,” KTR said.

    Taking a dig at the Centre, he said had the development in the country been like that of Telangana, the USD five trillion dream would have been achieved long back.

    A war of words broke out between AIMIM MLA Akbaruddin Owaisi and KTR on the Old City development and time taken by MIM legislators.

    The Speaker P Srinivas Reddy adjourned the House till Monday morning.

    Meanwhile, the state government is likely to table the Budget on February 6, sources said.

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    #Telangana #teaching #point #country #good #governanceMinister #KTR

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )