Tag: Key

  • Gruha Lakshmi, Dalit Bandhu, Podu lands: Telangana cabinet takes key decisions

    Gruha Lakshmi, Dalit Bandhu, Podu lands: Telangana cabinet takes key decisions

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    Hyderabad: Telangana Health and Finance minister T Harish Rao informed the people of Telangana on key cabinet decisions taken on several subjects like housing, Dalit Bandhu and Podu lands among others on Thursday by the state government under the leadership of chief minister K Chandrashekhar Rao.

    Gruha Lakshmi scheme

    Harish Rao said that the state government has decided to spend Rs 12000 crores for the construction of 4 lakh houses for poor families that possess land but cannot afford to build a house on it.

    He said, “Chief minister KCR took the decision to use Rs 12,000 crores for the construction of 4 lakh houses in the state under the ‘Gruhalakshmi’ scheme. People that have their own land will be given Rs 3 lakh to construct the houses in the name of the women in the family.

    “3,000 beneficiaries in each constituency will receive the money for the construction of the houses and the money will be directly deposited in their accounts in three phases,” he further informed.

    He said that 30 lakh houses were constructed by the poor in the state using loans from previous governments. “Today the cabinet ratified the decision to pay these loans on behalf of the people. A of total Rs 4,000 crores will be waived by the state government,” he said.

    On Dalit Bandhu phase 2

    The Finance minister stated that under Dalit Bandhu phase 2, one lakh thirty thousand people will be the beneficiaries. “100 per cent of the beneficiaries received the scheme benefits in the Huzurabad constituency. In the rest of the 118 constituencies, 1,100 beneficiaries will receive the benefits in Phase-2”.

    He said that the government had launched the Dalit Bandhu scheme on April 16, 2021, and it has been decided to celebrate April 16, every year on this occasion. “Chief minister K Chandrashekhar Rao has directed the officials to take steps regarding the swift implementation of the second phase,” he added.

    On Podu lands

    Harish Rao also announced the state government’s key decision to distribute 4 lakh acres of Podu lands to 155393 individuals from the tribal community. “Documents of individuals who were identified until now are printed and ready. This process will continue,” he informed.

    On the mega Dr BR Ambedkar statue

    The minister informed that the construction of Dr BR Ambedkar’s mega statue at Necklace road is complete and will be inaugurated on April 14.”Following the inauguration a huge meeting will be held with a participation from members of the Dalit community from across the state,” he said.

    Speaking about the new secretariat building, he said that the inauguration of the new secretariat building and the Martyrs memorial will take place within a month or so after the inauguration of Dr BR Ambedkar’s statue. “Both inaugurations are set to be completed by June 2,” he added.

    On Sheep distribution

    On the second phase of the sheep distribution scheme, Harish informed that 7,31,000 beneficiaries were identified and 50 per cent of them have received sheep until today. “Rs 4,463 crores have been sanctioned by the cabinet committee to complete the rest of the distributions as soon as possible,” said the minister.

    He informed that the district collectors will oversee the distribution of sheep for the rest of the beneficiaries to ensure transparency. “The distribution of sheep in the state will start in the month of April and is expected to be completed by August,” he added.

    On regularisation of houses

    Harish Rao that the chief minister has taken a decision to extend the deadline to apply for registration under GO 58 and 59.

    “Under the GO 58, so far 1,45,668 have applied and 42,000 have applied as per the GO 59. The chief minister has decided to give one last chance to people who have missed out during the last registration. We have extended the time to apply for another month,” he said.

    Guest houses in Kashi, Sabarimala

    Harish informed that guest houses will be constructed at Kashi in Uttar Pradesh and Sabarimala in Kerala, both pilgrimages for the Hindu community in order to ease Telangana travellers from troubles. “To help the devotees that travel to Kashi, a guest house will be built in Kashi with all facilities. The government will spend Rs 25 crores on building the guest house,” said Rao.

    He said that the chief minister has instructed the officials to reach out to the government officials in Kashi for land to build the guest house, if they are unable to provide the land, he asked them to buy private land.

    “Another guest house will be built for Ayyappa devotees in Sabarimala using Rs 27 crores. The chief minister of Kerala, speaking to chief minister KCR previously has agreed to provide land for the construction of the guest house,” he said.

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    #Gruha #Lakshmi #Dalit #Bandhu #Podu #lands #Telangana #cabinet #takes #key #decisions

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • KCR convenes key BRS meet on Friday

    KCR convenes key BRS meet on Friday

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    Hyderabad: A key meeting of Telangana’s ruling Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) will be held on Friday.

    A joint meeting of the BRS Parliamentary Party, Legislature Party and the State Executive will be held at Telangana Bhavan, the BRS headquarters here.

    The meeting will be presided over by BRS supremo and Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao.

    In view of this being an election year, the meeting will discuss widely about the implementation of government programmes, party activities, etc.

    BRS MPs, MLAs, MLCs, party State Executive Committee, district party Presidents, Zilla Parishad Chairpersons, state level Corporation Chairpersons, DCMS and DCCB Chairpersons will participate in the extended meeting.

    Chandrasekhar Rao has said that all the invitees must attend this meeting.

    The meeting also assumes significance of the notice issued by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) to BRS MLC K. Kavitha in Delhi excise policy scam.

    Kavitha, daughter of KCR, has been directed to appear for questioning in the case on Thursday in Delhi.

    Kavitha, a Member of Legislative Council, has already left for Delhi but it was not clear if she will be appearing before the ED on Thursday.

    The MLC said in a statement on Wednesday morning that as a law-abiding citizen, she will fully cooperate with the investigation agencies.

    She, however, said in view of the planned dharna in New Delhi over women’s reservation Bill on Friday and prefixed appointments, she will seek legal opinions on the date of attending it.

    Reacting strongly to the ED notice, BRS leaders have termed this as a political conspiracy by the BJP-led government at the Centre.

    Kavitha’s father or her brother and state minister K.T. Rama Rao are yet to react to the development.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • SSC Scientific Asst 2023 – Final Answer Key Released

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    SSC Scientific Asst 2023 – Final Answer Key Released

    Name of the Post : SSC Scientific Asst 2022 Final Answer Key Released

    Total Post : 990

    Staff Selection Commission (SSC) has published notification for the recruitment of Scientific Asst (Indian Meteorological Department) Exam 2022.

    Important Links

    Final Answer Key : Click here 

    JKPSC Fresh Govt Recruitment for 285 Posts

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    5395 Posts Yantra India Limited Recruitment 2023 – Apply Link Available

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    [ad_2] #SSC #Scientific #Asst #Final #Answer #Key #Released( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • KVS Various Posts Answer Key Released

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    KVS Various Posts Answer Key Released

    Name of the Post : KVS Various Vacancy (15 & 16/2022) Answer Key Released

    Total Post : 13404

    Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan (KVS) has Announced Notification for the recruitment of Principal, TGT, PGT, Librarian & Other vacancy

    Important Links

    Answer Key for Sl. No 3, 4, 9, 10 & 12 :  Link 

    JKPSC Fresh Govt Recruitment for 285 Posts

    J&K Govt Recruitment for Librarian Posts

    5395 Posts Yantra India Limited Recruitment 2023 – Apply Link Available

    Jammu Srinagar Daily Highway Traffic updates

    Join Telegram | Install App for Iphone and Android

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    [ad_2] #KVS #Posts #Answer #Key #Released( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • New CCTV wing, ‘peace’ committees: Hyderabad CP makes key decisions

    New CCTV wing, ‘peace’ committees: Hyderabad CP makes key decisions

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    Hyderabad: Ahead of festivals such as Holi, Shab-E-Barat, Ramzan, Sri Rama Navami, and Hanuman Jayanthi, city commissioner CV Anand instructed the city police to ‘bind over’ communal and rowdy elements. “Instate new peace committees with more youngsters on board,” he said.

    The Commissioner held a long high-level review meeting with all addl DCP and above-rank officers to discuss a range of important matters related to public safety and security & other administrative issues.

    The review was done on all the crimes pending for want of arrests, investigation, fsl reports, charge sheets, and DCPs were asked to specifically focus on them.

    There was discussion on the reorganisation of Hyderabad City Police and the new accommodation which is required, the several CCTV projects,the working status of the cameras, and targets set for each SHO and DCP to install new cameras.

    A new wing called D-CAMO (Drones & Cameras Maintenance Organisation) is now instated to deal with all CCTV camera & Drone repairs, projects, and execution which will be headed by an Addl.DCP/ACP rank officer which is further structured into 4 sub-wings. An independent third-party audit will be carried out across the city to identify the grey spots lacking CCTV coverage & to check the working condition of the existing cameras, a press note informed.

    “ Let us sensitize the public on the significance of CCTVs in crime prevention & detection,” Anand said.

    CP Anand expressed satisfaction with the overwhelming response to the online amusement license system, which received over 1183 applications in the past few weeks. Taking a cue from this, the IT cell was tasked to bring in more police services like the issue of Arms licenses online for the convenience of the public.

    He also instructed his deputies to initiate more programs towards health and wellness through the FitCop program, and to support the homes of the fallen heroes of the force, the need for CPR education in light of the death of a young and fit constable recently.

    Furthermore, the meeting delved into detail about the performance of patrols and blue colts, the effective functioning of the night round system, progress of 2023 action plans. All the DCPs were directed to closely monitor the station functioning and were told to adhere to protocols in lock-up custodies. HCSC activities, E-office implementation, and other issues were discussed during the meeting.

    Vikram Singh Mann IPS Addl.CP L &O, G.sudheer Babu IPS Addl.CP Traffic, AR.Srinivas IPS Addl.CP crimes, B.Parimala Hana Nutan IPS Jt.CP Admin, MSrinivasulu IPS Jt.CP CAR hqtr Hyd and other DCPs attended the meeting.

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    #CCTV #wing #peace #committees #Hyderabad #key #decisions

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • 5 key moments from the Supreme Court showdown over Biden’s student debt relief

    5 key moments from the Supreme Court showdown over Biden’s student debt relief

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    The three liberal justices and Amy Coney Barrett all raised questions about whether the states had standing to bring the case. A big wild card is three other Republican appointees — Kavanaugh, Gorsuch, and Roberts — all of whom were silent on the standing question, even though they seemed sharply critical of the merits of the case.

    Here’s POLITICO’s look at five key aspects of Tuesday’s closely-watched arguments on one of the Biden administration’s highest-profile policy initiatives:

    John Roberts: Size matters

    One particular fact about the Biden administration’s education debt relief program really seemed to be galling to Chief Justice John Roberts: It’s so darn big.

    Roberts seemed fixated on the sheer amount of the debt cancellation the Education Department was planning to offer before the courts froze the effort: an estimated $400 billion.

    Not content with the B-word that made astronomer Carl Sagan famous, the chief justice turned to the even more gargantuan T-word at least four times to make the debt relief program sound simply enormous.

    “We’re talking about half a trillion dollars and 43 million Americans,” Roberts intoned just minutes into the arguments Tuesday. “Congress shouldn’t have been surprised when half a trillion dollars is wiped off the books?”

    That became the prevailing framing of the program for Roberts and many of his colleagues, even liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

    Justice Samuel Alito uncharitably characterized the administration’s arguments this way, perhaps with inspiration from the late Senate Majority Leader Everett Dirksen: “When it comes to the administration of benefits programs, a trillion dollars here, a trillion dollars there, it doesn’t really make that much difference to Congress.”

    Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar told the conservative justices they were making a mistake to put so much emphasis on the overall cost and insisted it was proportionate to the need. “I recognize that this is a big program,” she said, adding, “but that’s in direct reaction to the Covid-19 pandemic, which itself was a really big problem.”

    Did Kavanaugh compare student loan relief to Korematsu?

    One of the most jarring comparisons at Tuesday’s arguments came when Justice Brett Kavanaugh suggested that the dangers posed by Biden’s debt relief plan could be akin to those from some of the worst excesses of presidential power. Kavanaugh mentioned the seizure of steel mills by President Harry Truman in 1952.

    Another leading example that the Trump appointed-justice didn’t cite directly is the internment President Franklin Roosevelt ordered of about 120,000 people of Japanese descent during World War II, a policy blessed by the Supreme Court in 1944 in Korematsu v. U.S., a decision many Americans hold in disgrace.

    “Some of the biggest mistakes in the Court’s history were deferring to assertions of executive emergency power. Some of the finest moments in the Court’s history were pushing back against presidential assertions of emergency power. And that’s continued not just in the Korean War, but post-9/11 in some of the cases there,” said Kavanaugh, who worked in President George W. Bush’s White House during the September 11 attacks.

    While Kavanaugh said that history left him concerned about the Biden policy, he later seemed to backtrack a bit, pointing to an amicus brief calling the debt relief plan “a case study in abuse” of those powers. “I’m not saying I agree with that,” the conservative justice quickly added, muddling the question.

    The most pointed rejoinder to Kavanaugh came from Justice Elena Kagan, who sits next to Kavanaugh and often trades quiet asides with him during arguments. She said Biden’s action didn’t sideline Congress as other presidents have, but directly embraced Congressional authority.

    “Congress used its voice in enacting this piece of legislation,” the Obama appointee said, referring to the 2003 law allowing the Education secretary to waive various rules during emergencies. “All this business about executive power, I mean, we worry about executive power when Congress hasn’t authorized the use of executive power.”

    Where’s MOHELA?

    The Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, known as MOHELA, figured heavily in the justices’ debate over whether the GOP states had standing to bring their lawsuit in the first place.

    Missouri, one of the states, argues that it can advance its case based on harms to MOHELA, which is a state-created entity that will face a reduction in revenue under Biden’s student debt relief plan.

    Prelogar, representing the Biden administration, conceded that if MOHELA itself had brought the lawsuit, the government wouldn’t contest its standing to bring such a case. But she said that Missouri couldn’t adopt MOHELA’s injuries as its own.

    Several of the justices also seized on the fact that MOHELA wasn’t part of the case.

    “If MOHELA is an arm of the state, why didn’t you just strong-arm MOHELA and say, ‘you’ve got to pursue this suit?’” Barrett asked the lawyer representing the GOP states.

    “That’s a question of state politics,” responded James Campbell, the Nebraska solicitor general who was representing the group of Republican states, including Missouri.

    Kagan suggested the state of Missouri was so far removed from MOHELA that the attorney general had to submit a public records request to obtain documents from the company. “If MOHELA was willing to hand you over the documents, you wouldn’t have filed a state FOIA request,” she said.

    Alito, who appeared sympathetic to the state’s argument for standing, speculated that MOHELA might have been worried about its contract with the Education Department under which the company is paid to manage millions of federal student loan borrower accounts. “Do you think there might be a dependent relationship between agencies like MOHELA and the federal government since we’re speculating about why they’re not here?”

    Indeed, MOHELA has publicly distanced itself from the GOP states’ lawsuit. The company has said its “executives were not involved” with the Missouri attorney general’s decision to file a lawsuit.

    MOHELA officials from the company also privately sought to reassure Democratic congressional aides and Biden administration officials that they were not involved in the lawsuit, POLITICO previously reported.

    Sotomayor tugs at heartstrings

    In hours of debate on complicated legal questions of standing, statutory interpretation and separation of powers, one soliloquy by Justice Sonia Sotomayor stood out: She detailed what hangs in the balance for borrowers in personal terms.

    “There’s 50 million students who … will benefit from this who today will struggle,” Sotomayor said, somewhat inflating the number of federal student loan borrowers who would benefit. (The Education Department estimates the total is roughly 42 million).

    “Many of them don’t have assets sufficient to bail them out after the pandemic,” the Obama appointee said. “They don’t have friends or families or others who can help them make these payments. The evidence is clear that many of them will have to default. Their financial situation will be even worse because once you default, the hardship on you is exponentially greater. You can’t get credit. You’re going to pay higher prices for things. They are going to continue to suffer from this pandemic in a way that the general population doesn’t.”

    Sotomayor also seemed to warn her colleagues against substituting their judgements about fairness and need for those the administration made in setting up the debt relief program.

    “What you’re saying is now we’re going to give judges the right to decide how much aid to give them,” Sotomayor said during an exchange with Campbell. “Instead of the person with the expertise and the experience, the Secretary of Education, who’s been dealing with educational issues and the problems surrounding student loans, we’re going to take it upon ourselves.”

    A former Education secretary makes an appearance:

    Former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, who invoked the HEROES Act in 2020 to extend the pandemic moratorium on student loan payments, was among those who watched the arguments from the court gallery.

    DeVos has been sharply critical of student debt relief and signed an amicus brief with other former Republican education secretaries that blasted the proposal as unconstitutional.

    Under her leadership, the Education Department developed a legal opinion concluding that the agency lacked the legal authority to cancel large amounts of student debt without new Congressional approval. The Biden administration last August rescinded the department’s legal opinion and issued its own memo concluding that the HEROES Act provides a basis for broad-based debt relief.

    Several Biden Education Department officials also attended the arguments, including Rich Cordray, the head of the department’s student aid office, who oversees implementation of the debt relief program.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Uncertainty looms over key govt projets following Sisodia’s arrest

    Uncertainty looms over key govt projets following Sisodia’s arrest

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    New Delhi: With the arrest of Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia in the excise policy scam case, uncertainty looms over several critical Delhi government projects, including streetscaping and traffic decongestion plans, ahead of the G20 summit.

    Sisodia, who held 18 of the 33 Delhi government departments, was the administrative face of the AP-led dispensation, and was also handling crucial departments like education, health, PWD, among others.

    Departments like health and home were handed over to him following his cabinet colleague Satyendar Jain’s arrest in an alleged money laundering case in May last year.

    A special CBI court on Monday remanded Sisodia to five-day custody of the central probe agency till March 4.

    The CBI on Sunday evening arrested Sisodia in connection with alleged corruption in the formulation and implementation of the now-scrapped liquor policy for 2021-22

    Under the streetscaping project, 16 stretches are being revamped and is aimed at decongesting, redesigning and beautifying 540 km of roads across the national capital.

    Nearly 1,300 kilometre roads fall under the Public Works Department of the Delhi government.

    The beautification of roads includes well-designed pedestrian-friendly footpaths, development of green stretches through plantations, creation of open air sitting areas, cycle tracks, selfie points, public facilities like water ATMs, toilets and street furniture.

    Sisodia was keenly involved in checking progress of the work under the project by holding regular meetings with officials and carrying out inspections.

    His arrest will definitely hinder the progress, said party functionaries.

    “It was estimated that more than Rs 1,000 crore will be spent by the Delhi government on events related to the G20 Summit.

    “The deputy chief minister had been holding various meetings to review projects related to the G20 Summit and to expedite other ambitious works of the government, including making roads akin to European standards. These projects will of course be hindered,” said an AAP functionary.

    Asked whether the party has thought of anyone to replace Sisodia, the functionary said it is ‘too early’ to think about it.

    “Sisodia will continue to be part of the cabinet like Jain. His portfolio will be distributed among the existing ministers like Kailash Gahlot, Imran Hussain and Gopal Rai.

    “There is a possibility that Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal might assume charge of some key portfolios. But meetings will be held among the party’s top brass to decide the future course of action,” he said.

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    #Uncertainty #looms #key #govt #projets #Sisodias #arrest

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • China’s Communist Party begins key meeting to discuss major revamp, government

    China’s Communist Party begins key meeting to discuss major revamp, government

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    Beijing: China’s ruling Communist Party on Sunday began a key meeting to carry out a major revamp of the party and the government ahead of next month’s annual session of the Parliament.

    The meeting of the Communist Party of China (CPC) plenum started its three-day plenary session in Beijing on Sunday, with President Xi Jinping, who is also the general secretary of the party, presenting a work report, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

    The Central Committee plenary session is being held ahead of the annual session of China’s Parliament, the National People’s Congress (NPC), and the top advisory body — the China People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) — in the first week of March.

    During the NPC’s annual session, China will unveil a new leadership, including a new premier to succeed the incumbent Li Keqiang who is retiring. Barring Xi, most of the officials at the top were expected to be replaced.

    Earlier this week, the political bureau of the party discussed the draft plan for the reforms of the CPC as well as state institutions and finalised recommendations to be submitted to the Central Committee plenary for approval.

    The Central Committee which was elected at the once in five-year Congress of the party held in October last year consisted of 203 members and 168 alternate members.

    Xi, 69, was re-elected for an unprecedented third five-year term by the Congress.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • One year into Russia’s war, a key global food security deal hangs in the balance

    One year into Russia’s war, a key global food security deal hangs in the balance

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    “The grain deal is absolutely critical for the response to the food crisis,” said WFP economist Friederike Greb. There was already a “toxic mix” of factors — from climate change to debt — driving hunger before the war. The world cannot now afford another spike in food prices, she told POLITICO, making it vital to extend the deal.

    Russia claims that most Ukrainian cargoes have headed to Europe and other rich countries; not to those in Africa and Asia bearing the brunt of the global food crisis.

    Ukrainian and Western officials dismiss that notion. They counter that Russia has stayed in the grain deal to act as a spoiler, deliberately slowing food exports. This has caused a backlog of Ukraine-bound vessels to pile up off the Turkish coast — inflating prices and benefiting Russia as a rival food exporter. Ahead of the one-year mark of the war, President Joe Biden personally accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of trying to “starve the world.”

    With the deal up for renewal March 19, rhetoric is escalating on both sides — as Ukraine seeks greater access to world markets and Russia pushes back against Western sanctions that it says are to blame for rising food insecurity.

    Weaponizing hunger

    When Russian forces invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 last year, millions of lives were put in danger. Guns were one weapon; hunger was the other. The invasion tipped a world struggling to cope with the consequences of climate change and the coronavirus pandemic into a full-blown crisis of food security.

    In peacetime, Ukraine’s food exports were enough to feed 400 million people. Its farmers supplied a tenth of the wheat and half the sunflower oil sold on world markets. Its shipments of grains and oilseeds through the Black Sea fell to zero last March, from 5.7 million metric tons in February.

    For net importers the impact was immediate and direct. Egypt and Libya had imported two-thirds of their cereals from Russia and Ukraine, for instance. Other countries were hit by the fallout: Prices shot up, first in response to the invasion, and again as countries like India imposed bans on grain exports.

    “One of the cruelest ways in which Putin has used the weapons of war to impose costs on people around the world is the ways in which his early blockade of Black Sea ports raised prices for hungry people in dozens of countries around the world,” Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), a close ally of President Joe Biden and who serves on the Foreign Relations Committee, said in an interview.

    Coons noted the U.N., Turkey and Ukraine’s work to forge the Black Sea grain deal has reduced some of the overwhelming strain on global food prices, “but not enough yet.”

    In Ukraine, farmers could not sell their crops after a bumper harvest before the war left grain stores brimming. The next harvest, already in the ground, had nowhere to go, said Joseph Glauber, a senior research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute and former chief economist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

    The standstill to exports also endangered the home front. Before the war, almost half of the country’s budget stemmed from exports, and nearly half of those exports were agricultural, according to Dmytro Los of the Ukrainian Business and Trade Association. “So don’t forget that, during the war, we lost almost 45-50 percent of GDP,” Los said.

    To stave off starvation abroad and rescue Ukrainian farmers, the EU set up overland “solidarity lanes” to help bring food exports out through Eastern Europe. And, in July, the U.N. and Turkey mediated the deal to allow safe passage for Ukrainian food shipments through the Black Sea.

    Some 21.5 million tons of Ukrainian produce have been transported under the initiative, enabling the World Food Programme to deliver valuable aid to countries like Ethiopia and Afghanistan.

    This has helped ease some of the pressure on global food prices — although they remain high — while ensuring Ukraine’s agriculture sector, a leading driver of its economy, doesn’t collapse.

    “It’s very important for Ukraine, but it is even more important for the world,” said Oleksiy Goncharenko, a Ukrainian MP who represents Odesa — one of the few ports covered under the current agreement.

    As talks resume this week, the fate of the grain deal hangs in the balance. Both sides have plenty of gripes.

    Who benefits?

    Ukraine — which launched a humanitarian food program in November to counter Russian propaganda and mitigate the food crisis — complains that the Kremlin is using food as a “weapon” by deliberately holding up inspections for ships heading to and from its Black Sea ports.

    More than 140 vessels are queuing up at Turkey’s strategic Bosphorus Strait — through which Ukrainian grain cargoes must pass to reach global markets — due to the delays in inspections, Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said on Feb. 15.

    Russia, for its part, has criticized “hidden” Western sanctions against individuals such as ammonia baron Dmitry Mazepin and its state agriculture bank, which it says have throttled its own fertilizer and food exports by making it difficult to complete transactions with buyers. Western officials have noted that Moscow is holding back fertilizer exports from world markets, worsening the supply crunch. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in an interview that it’s clear Russia has “already dangled” fertilizer supplies “over countries that thought about providing assistance to Ukraine.”

    Under the Black Sea grain agreement, inbound and outbound vessels must be inspected by four parties: the U.N., Turkey, Ukraine and Russia. The Istanbul-based Joint Coordination Center was set up to oversee this with the aim of clearing some 12 cargoes a day. At their peak in October, inspections reached an average of 10.6 a day. Since then, they have dwindled to three per day, estimates analyst Madeleine Overgaard at shipping data platform Kpler.

    When Russia temporarily suspended its participation in the initiative at the end of October, U.N. and Turkish teams carried out the inspections alone; they managed to do 85 in two days, Ukraine’s Deputy Infrastructure Minister Yurii Vaskov told POLITICO.

    Russia has since reduced its staffing on the inspection teams, he explained, and those still on the job are dragging out checks that would normally take just an hour.

    The amount of grain backlogged in Turkey is enough to feed the world’s estimated 828 million hungry people for more than two weeks, U.S. officials estimate. In public and behind the scenes, they are pressing Moscow to not only renew the deal but to hold up its end of the agreement.

    “Fundamentally, we’re not asking for anything that they haven’t agreed to do already,” said one U.S. official. “What we’re asking for is adherence to those commitments.”

    Sticking points

    The war of words indicates that Russia is going to use the deal’s renewal date as an opportunity to make more demands. “There will certainly be new turmoil around this — that’s without question,” said Yevgeniya Gaber, an Atlantic Council fellow and former Ukrainian diplomat.

    Kyiv is pushing to pick up the pace of exports by extending the deal’s reach to cover more ports, such as Mikolaiv on the lower reaches of the Bug River, Vaskov told POLITICO.

    Russia wants its banks to regain access to the SWIFT international payment system, and for fertilizers to be included in the deal. The Kremlin is also angling to restart a critical ammonia pipeline that runs to Pivdennyi in the Odesa region — something U.S. and European officials are increasingly open to should Kyiv allow it, given ammonia’s role as a key fertilizer ingredient. Ukrainian officials have cited security concerns, however, and some Western allies are worried the pipeline could deliver a new revenue stream to Moscow.

    “If it’s going to help us from a fertilizer standpoint, obviously, that’s something you got to weigh,” Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho), the top Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, said in an interview. “On the other hand, I don’t want to do anything that helps the Russians in any way shape or form. So we may wind up having to weigh in.”

    Ukraine is also exploring how to get ships outside the deal’s scope moving in the Black Sea again with the help of the International Maritime Organization.

    “We are not talking about only Ukrainian-flag vessels. We are talking about international commercial, not military, ships,” said Vaskov, adding that this could be a Plan B if the Black Sea Grain Initiative expires.

    The IMO confirmed that work is under way to try and facilitate the release of more than 60 commercial ships not covered by the deal. “The IMO Secretary General is actively pursuing all avenues to develop, negotiate and facilitate the safe departure of these vessels,” an IMO spokesperson said in response to an inquiry from POLITICO.

    Feed the world

    The outcome of talks on rolling over the Black Sea grain deal will reverberate through global commodity markets — especially in Africa.

    Some 65 percent of Ukrainian wheat shipped under the initiative has gone to developing countries; 19 percent to the poorest Least Developed Countries, according to data from the Joint Coordination Center.

    And, while China, Spain and Turkey are the top three destinations for Ukrainian cargoes, some wheat delivered to Turkey is processed there and re-exported to countries like Iraq and Sudan, or sold to the WFP and distributed as food aid. The Black Sea deal has made it possible for the WFP to deliver 481,000 tons of wheat to Somalia, Yemen, Ethiopia and Afghanistan, easing local price pressures.

    Russia, which reported strong crop yields last year, has gained from higher wheat prices as a result of the war in Ukraine, according to Glauber at IFPRI. “That’s true for all wheat producers,” he explained, “but Russia in particular because they send their wheat to many of the similar markets as Ukraine.”

    The amount of grain and oilseeds that Ukrainian farmers managed to produce last year was “remarkable,” said Glauber. “But this year is different.” Yields from wheat planted last fall will be down by up to 40 percent, he forecast. For Ukrainian farmers already dealing with higher costs of production and export, this bodes ill.

    Beyond Ukraine, other countries may make up some of the shortfall but, added Glauber, Ukraine is “such an important exporter” that what happens there “is important to the world.”

    The grain deal — even if it is rolled over — is a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for averting escalating rates of hunger. Risks persist that the world will tip into a deeper crisis.

    “We’re looking at countries that are on the brink of famine,” said Cindy McCain, who is U.S. ambassador to the U.N. food and agriculture agencies in Rome and is the top contender to replace WFP chief David Beasley when his term ends in April.

    “Now, we may skirt it a little bit, but we’re in dire straits.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Chinese Communist Party heads for major revamp at next week’s key meet

    Chinese Communist Party heads for major revamp at next week’s key meet

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    Beijing: China’s ruling Communist Party as well as the state institutions will undergo a major revamp at a key meeting of the party to be held here next week, it was announced here on Wednesday.

    The Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) headed by President Xi Jinping will hold its second plenary session from February 26 to 28, an official press release after the political bureau meeting of the Party held here on Tuesday said.

    The Political Bureau discussed the draft plan on the reforms of Party and state institutions, which will be submitted to the second plenary session of the Central Committee for review, it said without disclosing the details of the planned reforms.

    The Central Committee which is the top policy of the party was elected at the once in five-year Congress of the party held in October last year and consisted of 203 members and 168 alternate members.

    Xi, 69, was re-elected for an unprecedented third five-year term by the Congress.
    The Central Committee plenary session will be held ahead of the annual session of China’s Parliament, the National People’s Congress (NPC) and the top advisory body the China People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).

    The two bodies were scheduled to meet in the first week of next month.

    After the NPC annual session, China will unveil a new leadership, including a new Premier to succeed the incumbent Li Keqiang who is retiring.

    Barring Xi, almost all officials at the top are expected to be replaced.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )