Tag: Hours

  • Moderate rains to persist for the next 24 hours in Telangana

    Moderate rains to persist for the next 24 hours in Telangana

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    Hyderabad: With heavy clouds circling the state, Telangana is likely to receive light to moderate rainfall on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday with most areas to receive moderate rains in the next 24 hours.

    Districts listed under the radar of the Telangana State Development Planning Society (TSDPS) will receive moderate rains including Mancherial, Kumuram Bheem, Mulugu, Siddipet, Bhadradri and Suryapet. All other districts are expected to receive light rains.

    The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) area is likely to receive light rains in the next 24 hours. Maximum temperatures are expected to be in the range of 29 degree Celsius to 32 degree Celsius, while the minimum temperatures are likely to be in the range of 18 degree Celsius to 21 degree Celsius.

    In the state, the maximum temperatures are expected to be in the range of 32 degree Celsius to 35 degree Celsius, while the minimum temperatures are likely to be in the range of 18 degree Celsius to 22 degree Celsius.

    In the last 24 hours, the highest rainfall of 47.3 mm was recorded in Kapra and Medchal-Malkajgiri districts under the GHMC area.

    The highest rainfall of 118.8 mm in the state was recorded in the Venkatapuram, Mulugu district.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Jammu Constable Dies Hours After CBI Arrest Over Rs 3,000 Bribe

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    SRINAGAR:  A policeman died at a hospital within hours of his arrest by CBI on corruption charges in the Kathua district of Jammu and Kashmir on Saturday, officials said.

    News agency ANI reported that the deceased was identified as head constable Mushtaq Ahmad, a resident of Billawar who was caught red-handed while allegedly taking a bribe of Rs 3,000 from a complainant at a women’s police station in Kathua, where he was posted.

    The policeman was being questioned in a separate room at the police station by sleuths when he complained of uneasiness and was rushed to the Government Medical College (GMC) hospital for treatment.

    “The body of the head constable has been kept at the Government Medical College hospital mortuary for legal process,” said an official.

    The cause of the death is yet to be ascertained, the officials informed further.

    Further details are awaited.

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    #Jammu #Constable #Dies #Hours #CBI #Arrest #Bribe

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Iranian female activist rearrested hours after release

    Iranian female activist rearrested hours after release

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    Tehran: One of Iran’s prominent women activist and journalists Sepideh Qolian, was rearrested a few hours after her release from Evin prison, Iranian media reported.

    28-year-old Sepideh Qolian, was released on Wednesday, March 15, after serving four-years and seven months in prison.

    After her release on March 15, Qolian posted on social media platforms a video of herself without the headscarf shouting slogans against Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei outside Tehran’s Evin prison.

    “Khamenei the Zahhak! We’ll take you down into grave,” she shouted.

    “After four years and seven months, I was released from the Haftepe case. This time I came out hoping for the freedom of Iran! Hoping for the release of my dear ones Sepideh Kashani, Nilofar Bayani, Zahra Zahtabchi, Bahare Hedayat, Golrokh Iraei, Nahid Taqavi and all political prisoners, especially women prisoners. #Zhen_Zhian_Ezadi,” Qolian tweeted.

    Five hours later, Qolian was arrested on one of the highways while she and her family were traveling to their hometown of Dezful in the southwest of Khuzestan in three cars.

    Qolian was arrested in 2018 and convicted of working “against national security” for supporting a strike and protest by workers at a sugar factory in Iran’s Khuzestan province.

    She was initially sentenced to 19 years and six months in prison, but this sentence was reduced to five years in the appeal court.

    In an open letter in January 2023, she pointed the torture in prison against the detainees of the recent nationwide protests, along with six other female prisoners, she protested against the “issue of death sentence” against the prisoners.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sharjah: Businesses must obtain special permits to extend working hours in Ramzan

    Sharjah: Businesses must obtain special permits to extend working hours in Ramzan

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    Abu Dhabi: The Sharjah municipality on Tuesday announced the start of issuing permits to extend working hours after midnight during the holy month of Ramzan for commercial establishments, the Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported.

    The municipality provides these services as part of its preparations for the holy month and to facilitate these institutions by giving them the opportunity to carry out their business activities late at night.

    Restaurants, bakeries and cafeterias are exempt from this requirement as they can extend their hours after midnight without a permit.

    During the holy month of Ramzan, engineering contractors are not allowed to obtain work permits after midnight.

    This permits can be obtained from dedicated service channels including Sharjah municipality website.

    On March 9, Sharjah municipality announced new rules for the operation and supply of food during fasting days of delicatessens.

    Restaurants and food outlets are obliged to comply with the new rules and obtain the necessary permits to operate during the day in the holy month.

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    #Sharjah #Businesses #obtain #special #permits #extend #working #hours #Ramzan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ramzan 2023: Saudi announces working hours for govt sector employees

    Ramzan 2023: Saudi announces working hours for govt sector employees

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    Riyadh: The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) on Tuesday announced the Ramzan working hours for government sector employees throughout the holy month of Ramzan 2023-1444, local media reported.

    The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development (MHRSD) said that Ramzan working hours should not be more than five hours.

    According to Arabic daily Okaz, the ministry stated that working hours during the holy month should be from 10 am to 3 pm.

    However, the ministry advised that government agencies can be flexible depending on business needs.

    A two-hour window is provided in which agencies can start earlier or later than the recommended start times.

    The regulations set by the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development state that any government agency seeking to change the 10 am to 3 pm guidelines must notify employees of expected Ramzan work hours by March 19.

    This year, Ramzan is expected to begin in the UAE on March 23, but the exact date is likely to be announced on the night of March 22 by the moon-sighting committee.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Toys ‘R’ Us shuts Hyderabad store within 24 hours

    Toys ‘R’ Us shuts Hyderabad store within 24 hours

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    Hyderabad: Toys ‘R’ Us, a leading American toy and clothing retailer, shut its store at a shopping mall in Hyderabad within 24 hours of opening it due to some legal issues, sources said.

    The over 4,000 square feet store was opened in Sarath City Capital mall on March 11 but closed the next day.

    The mall owners reportedly pulled the plug on Toys ‘R’ Us due to a no-compete clause with another global toy retailer, which already had a store in the same mall.

    Toys ‘R’ Us has been launched in India in two formats – Toys ‘R’ Us, which is the world’s leading toy store, and Babies ‘R’ Us, a one-stop destination for baby essentials.

    The retailer’s India operations are run by a Bengaluru-based firm, Ace turtle, which entered into a joint venture with the Flipkart Group’s wholesale entity in India in June 2021 to acquire the licence for Toys ‘R’ Us and Babies ‘R’ Us.

    This is the second entry of the American toy and clothing retailer in India in six years. In 2017, it had tied up with Tablez India, a division of Abu Dhabi-based Lulu Group International, for an exclusive master franchise agreement.

    The global toy brand was launched in India in October 2017. It had plans to open over 200 stores but it could manage to open only 14 stores which wound up within three years of operations.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • How Biden saved Silicon Valley startups: Inside the 72 hours that transformed U.S. banking

    How Biden saved Silicon Valley startups: Inside the 72 hours that transformed U.S. banking

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    bank collapse startups 97644

    The result, announced just minutes before financial markets in Asia reopened, was sweeping: The federal government would provide SVB’s depositors with access to all their funds, effectively averting painful financial uncertainty — and the threat of heavy losses — for thousands of venture-backed startups. Signature Bank, which had followed SVB into insolvency, would receive the same guarantee.

    Even more critically, the Federal Reserve would provide a massive lifeline to the nation’s banks: It would singlehandedly give all other similar lenders access to funds designed to keep them afloat and quell the panic brewing across the country.

    The swift and forceful action to rescue depositors at the two failed midsize lenders rewrote crucial banking guardrails in ways that could reverberate for years. It put the Biden administration’s stamp — for good or ill — on the sector’s future financial stability, while sending a message about the government’s willingness to rescue private businesses in new ways. It also was done without passing a single new act of Congress or holding hearings among elected officials in recent days.

    And it almost didn’t happen.

    President Joe Biden began the weekend highly skeptical of anything that could be labeled a taxpayer-funded bailout, according to four people close to the situation, who were not authorized to speak for attribution.

    That would be a serious political risk for the president given that many of SVB’s customers were start-up entrepreneurs and investors with so much money deposited in the bank that they far exceeded the federal government’s $250,000 insurance limit. Signature catered in part to once-high-flying crypto investors.

    Biden, who as vice president had watched then-President Barack Obama get hammered over his role in bailing out giant banks during the financial crisis, had little desire for a repeat — especially since he had long embraced a “bottom-up, middle out” economic philosophy focused on average working families, the people close to the situation said.

    Yet as officials worked through the weekend — mostly in open-ended virtual meetings tying several agencies together — to determine the blast radius of SVB’s failure, they concluded that failing to protect the bank’s depositors could leave small businesses across the country unable to access money needed to pay workers and keep their operations going.

    “There’s not a way to help the people he wants without also helping the uninsured depositors who made a bad choice by putting too much money into a single bank,” said one adviser to the White House. “I have no doubt in my mind that he feels ambivalent about it. But he’s not willing to take a risk with this economy.”

    Though there was little concern that the failures of SVB and Signature threatened to destabilize the entire banking sector, officials mapping the network of companies tied to those institutions worried that refusing to step in could disrupt large swaths of the economy.

    Panicked depositors would likely pull their money en masse from other regional banks, creating a cascading crisis on top of the alarm already spreading throughout Silicon Valley.

    Biden aides and Democratic lawmakers had also grown concerned about the viability of certain payroll-processing companies tied to SVB, two people familiar with the discussions said. If they were unable to function, the number of workers at risk of not receiving their paychecks would increase exponentially. The situation risked spiraling quickly from there, denting consumer confidence in the economy’s stability.

    “There’s just a lot of sensitivity, and he doesn’t want to disrupt an economy that he thinks is doing really well for workers,” the adviser said. “The direction was: Stabilize everything.”

    Biden eventually came around to the view that an emergency rescue was the only viable option after multiple briefings Friday through Sunday from chief of staff Jeff Zients and new National Economic Council Director Lael Brainard, who just joined the White House after serving as vice chair of the Fed and chair of the central bank’s Financial Stability Committee. He also spoke with California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Saturday about SVB’s failure and its impact on the state.

    Biden received a final briefing from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen along with Zients and Brainard on Sunday afternoon shortly before the announcement.

    Throughout the weekend, Biden’s inner circle emphasized the potential impact on workers’ paychecks, which they believed would resonate both with the president and the public, said one of the people familiar with the deliberations. And they urged Biden to speak to the public before U.S. markets opened to ward off runs on other regional banks.

    Biden agreed, but not before stressing that his speech needed to play up his concern for small businesses and make it clear Americans should maintain trust in the banking system.

    At 1 p.m. Friday, Yellen convened a team to come up with a battle plan: Fed Chair Jerome Powell, FDIC Chair Martin Gruenberg, Acting Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu, and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, whose regional branch oversaw the bank.

    Their teams eventually settled on three potential options, according to a person familiar with the talks: looking for a buyer, backstopping uninsured depositors, and launching a new emergency lending program at the Fed. By Saturday, they’d agreed to pull the trigger and work on all three.

    But it was not easy getting to the finish line, especially when it came to the FDIC and protecting all depositors at the two failed banks.

    The FDIC’s decision was particularly fraught and down to the final hours, two people said. Agency officials worried that the proposal could create thorny issues for the agency, which is statutorily bound to protect the deposit insurance fund — a longstanding pot of money financed by bank fees.

    It also raised questions about whether the FDIC might be expected to make all depositors whole anytime a bank fails, something it is not designed to do, making the decision especially painful for Gruenberg and his fellow board members.

    Though the Fed and the FDIC were each designed to stop financial panics, the moves by both agencies also risked ratifying the notion that the government would always be there to dull the consequences of the collapse of a larger bank. It was the “moral hazard” question that dogged rescue efforts in 2008 and 2009.

    But the administration needed a straightforward solution, and also faced increasing pressure from Capitol Hill, where California lawmakers inundated by worried constituents pushed officials to take whatever steps were necessary to maximize SVB’s chances of being bought by another bank.

    Members of the California delegation spent the weekend scrambling for any information that might shed light on whether SVB’s extensive customer network of high-tech startups and powerful venture capitalists would be able to access their funds come Monday. A briefing with FDIC officials on Friday offered little substance — according to a lawmaker who attended — as the agency was still gathering information about the bank’s uninsured deposits.

    As information trickled out on Sunday about a possible plan to backstop depositors, FDIC and Treasury officials wouldn’t even confirm or deny a widely reported auction process for SVB’s assets, Rep. Anna Eshoo, a California Democrat whose district includes a large section of Silicon Valley, said in an interview.

    While lawmakers remained largely in the dark until shortly before the announcement, officials from the Fed, FDIC, White House and Treasury spent all weekend in rolling virtual meetings that continued through Friday and Saturday nights into Sunday.

    The administration had yet to finalize its plan by the time Yellen went on “Face the Nation” Sunday morning, forcing her to remain noncommittal about a path forward. Yellen merely said the government would not be bailing out a bank’s investors.

    Yet over the next several hours, officials raced to nail down the final details of their approach. Emails and drafts were exchanged among the top players right up until they pushed the button on the announcement and held press briefings. One person familiar with the meetings described them as short of frantic but “very driven and determined.”

    At 6:15 p.m. ET on Sunday, the Fed, Treasury and the FDIC jointly announced that the government would immediately provide access to all depositor funds held at the two failed banks, using the government’s power to immediately designate the institutions as systemically significant.

    The action did forestall a market meltdown. Stocks ended Monday only slightly lower. But it did not keep investors from hammering other regional banks. Shares in First Republic, which saw lines of panicked depositors over the weekend, plunged 62 percent despite the government actions, suggesting investors still have doubts about the banking system, especially the tiers just below the most heavily regulated giant banks.

    Bob Kocher, a partner at venture capital firm Venrock and former Obama-era White House official, said some panicked companies are going as far as transferring all their money into board members’ individual bank accounts while they set up their own new accounts with major financial institutions.

    “There’s no way now as a board member you can sign off on putting all your money into a regional bank,” he said, adding that he expects to see significant outflows at similarly sized institutions like First Republic Bank and PacWest Bancorp. “Everybody’s racing to put their money into JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs.”

    Beyond making payroll, Kocher said, SVB’s failure raised questions about how companies would pay for basic services like cloud storage and website maintenance, as well a constellation of smaller suppliers, if their deposits got tied up in a troubled bank.

    “I think it’s going to take at least a month or two for things to calm down and settle out,” he said.

    There’s similar trepidation among Biden officials, who spent Monday holding their breath, closely monitoring banks’ falling stock prices for signs of broader contagion.

    In the meantime, aides have tried to head off blowback from the party’s progressive wing, emphasizing that taxpayer money won’t directly go toward propping up SVB’s depositors — and that the toll on workers could have been far worse had they simply let the bank fail.

    Biden stressed that point on Monday in remarks aimed at calming the markets, expressing confidence that “the banking system is safe” while also repeatedly emphasizing that taxpayers wouldn’t be on the hook for any losses.

    Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), the top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, was similarly resolute. “The government is not bailing out anything,” she said in an interview. “If the banks have made mistakes, if the investments have been bad, if they weren’t watching the balance sheet, they’re going to be held accountable.”

    Jonathan Lemire, Sam Sutton and Eleanor Mueller contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Ramzan 2023: UAE announces working hours for private sector employees

    Ramzan 2023: UAE announces working hours for private sector employees

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    Abu Dhabi: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Monday announced working hours for private-sector employees during the holy month of Ramzan.

    The Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation said that the number of work hours would be reduced by two during the holy month.

    Usually, employees in the private sector work eight hours a day. This will be reduced to six hours a day during Ramzan.

    In a circular issued in this regard, the ministry said, “In accordance with the requirements and nature of their work, companies may apply flexible or remote work patterns within the limits of the daily working hours during the days of Ramzan.”

    On Friday, the UAE government announced the Ramzan working hours for the employees of federal authorities.

    The working hours would be from 9 am until 2:30 pm from Monday to Thursday and from 9 am until 12 pm on Fridays.

    This year, Ramzan is expected to start on March 23 in the UAE, but the exact date is likely to be announced by the moon sighting committee on the night of March 22.

    Eid-Al-Fitr is expected to be on Friday, April 21, 2023. Eid holidays will be from Ramzan 29 until Shawwal 3 – based on the Islamic calendar.

    The exact date of the start of Ramzan and Eid-Al-Fitr will be confirmed closer to the date, based on the moon-sighting tradition.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ramzan 2023: UAE announces working hours for private sector employees

    Ramzan 2023: UAE announces working hours for private sector employees

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    Abu Dhabi: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Monday announced working hours for private-sector employees during the holy month of Ramzan.

    The Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation said that the number of work hours would be reduced by two during the holy month.

    Usually, employees in the private sector work eight hours a day. This will be reduced to six hours a day during Ramzan.

    In a circular issued in this regard, the ministry said, “In accordance with the requirements and nature of their work, companies may apply flexible or remote work patterns within the limits of the daily working hours during the days of Ramzan.”

    On Friday, the UAE government announced the Ramzan working hours for the employees of federal authorities.

    The working hours would be from 9 am until 2:30 pm from Monday to Thursday and from 9 am until 12 pm on Fridays.

    This year, Ramzan is expected to start on March 23 in the UAE, but the exact date is likely to be announced by the moon sighting committee on the night of March 22.

    Eid-Al-Fitr is expected to be on Friday, April 21, 2023. Eid holidays will be from Ramzan 29 until Shawwal 3 – based on the Islamic calendar.

    The exact date of the start of Ramzan and Eid-Al-Fitr will be confirmed closer to the date, based on the moon-sighting tradition.



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    #Ramzan #UAE #announces #working #hours #private #sector #employees

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ramzan 2023: UAE announces working hours for federal employees

    Ramzan 2023: UAE announces working hours for federal employees

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    Abu Dhabi: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Friday announced Ramzan working hours for employees at federal agencies and ministries.

    According to a circular from the UAE’s Federal Authority for Government Human Resources (FAHR), the official working hours for ministries and federal authorities will be from 9 am to 2:30 pm from Monday to Thursday, and from 9 am to 12 pm on Friday.

    Federal ministries and departments will be allowed to implement flexible work schedules or work remotely.

    This year, Ramzan is expected to begin in the UAE on March 23, but the exact date is likely to be announced on the night of March 22 by the moon-sighting committee.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )