Tag: Power

  • Power Shutdown in Jammu and Kashmir Areas- Know Details Here – Kashmir News

    Power Shutdown in Jammu and Kashmir Areas- Know Details Here – Kashmir News

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    Power Shutdown in Jammu and Kashmir Areas- Know Details Here

    JAMMU, FEBRUARY 25 (KN) : Chief Engineer (Distribution) JPDCL, Jammu has informed that the power supply to Dallian, Bharath, Dashnan, Ghat, Bhabore and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 3 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Mahanpur, Raipur, Dhar, Billawar, Dewal, Lahri, Bathri, Mandli, Bhaddu, Duners and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 10 am to 3 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to IGC Phase-II, Industry, Bainglad, Rahiyan, Raipur, Mawa, BSF and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 5 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Rangoor, Ramgarh, Industrial area and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 4 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to Raghunath Bazar, Residency Road, Wazarat Road, Kanak Mandi, Rajinder Bazar and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 2 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Talab Tillo, Trilokpur, Bohri, Udheywala, Machclian, Marh GhoManhasa, Gajansoo and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 1 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to Rakh Muthi, Bomal, Devipur, Palwan, Sohal, Bhalwal, Brahmana, Jad, Jourian, Bakore and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 3 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Jourian, Troti, Muthi, Mara, Bakora, Rakh Muthi, PHE, BSF, Border Migrant, Sohal, Balli Gulaba, Chowki Choura, Tanda, Maira Mandrian, Sungal Samah, Kanachak, Kalyanpur, Panjore, Lalyal, Jaswan, Pariyal, Makyal, BSF and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 1 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to Channi, Chandwan, Rajbagh, Hamirpur, Jasrota and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 3 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Ramsoo, Ukhral, Khari, Nachilana and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 and 27 from 10 am to 5 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to Arnas, Dharmari, Mahore, Sarh Bagga and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 4 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Kathua, Mahanpur, Sewa, HEP, Samba, Billawar, Ghatti, Hiranagar and adjoining areas and Railway Traction Supply Manwal, RS Pura, Industrial area Bari Brahmana, Vijaypur, Nandpur shall remain affected on February 26 from 9 am to 4 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to Pandorian, Rehal, Suhagpur, Part of Arnia, Trewa, Chaatha, SKUAST, Indira Nagar and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 27 from 9 am to 3 pm.

    Meanwhile, the Superintending Engineer (Distribution) JPDCL, O&M Circle Kathua has informed that the power supply to Industries under Feeder-3rd shall remain affected on February 26 from 10 am to 4 pm.

    However, the Executive Engineer Elect. Division-I, JPDCL, Parade Jammu has informed that the power supply to Asarabaad (Green Enclave) shall remain affected on March 01 and 02 from 8 am to 1 pm.(KN)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Azad Promises To Revive Roshni Act If Voted To Power

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    SRINAGAR: Former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad, who is also the chairperson of the Democratic Progressive Azad Party (DPAP), has announced that if his party wins the upcoming assembly elections, he will bring back the Roshni Act in the Union Territory. The Act, which provides ownership rights to occupants, was initially passed in 2001 by the National Conference government but was repealed in 2018 by the then-governor Satya Pal Malik.

    Addressing a rally at Larnoo Kokernag, Azad expressed his concern over the economic crises in Jammu and Kashmir and said that his aim is to build the region as a welfare state, where the economy grows to the extent that people are willing to pay taxes themselves. He emphasized that the poor are being crushed with rising electricity bills, water charges, and property taxes.

    The Roshni Act, officially known as the Jammu and Kashmir State Land (Vesting of Ownership to Occupants) Act, 2001, was modified during Azad’s tenure from 2005 to 2008. However, in 2014, the Comptroller and Auditor General’s (CAG) report revealed that many political persons from different parties had benefited from the Act. Consequently, in November 2018, the Act was repealed by the then-governor.

    Despite the Act being declared illegal, unconstitutional, and unsustainable by the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh on October 9, 2020, Azad has reiterated his commitment to bring back the Roshni Act. He believes that this law will help build a better future for the people of Jammu and Kashmir.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Power Shutdown: Here Is The List Of Areas

    Power Shutdown: Here Is The List Of Areas

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    JAMMU: Chief Engineer (Distribution) JPDCL, Jammu has informed that the power supply to Balli, Gulaba, Chowki Choura, Tanda, Maira Mandrian, Sungal Samah and adjoining area shall remain affected on February 24 from 10 am to 4 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Rakh Muthi, Bomal, Devipur, Palwan, Sohal, Bhalwal, Brahmana, Jad, Jourian, Bakore and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 24 from 9 am to 3 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to Biaspur, Kotli, Kalyana, Khana Chak, Kotli, Nikowal, and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 24 from 9 am to 2 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Ramsoo, Ukhral, Khari, Nachilana and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 24 from 10 am to 5 pm.

    Meanwhile, the Executive Engineer, Electric Division-II, JPDCL, Jammu has informed that the power supply to Sector-E, Lane No- 7, 8 and 9 shall remain affected on February 27 and March 03 from 8 am to 2 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Sector-E, Lane No- 7, 8, 9 and Sainik Farm shall remain affected on and March 01 from 8 am to 2 pm.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Will Roll Back All Anti-People Orders When NC Comes To Power: Dr Farooq

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    SRINAGAR: The Jammu and Kashmir National Conference President and Member of Parliament Dr Farooq Abdullah said that when NC comes to power, it will roll back all the anti-people steps.

    He made these comments while chairing a provincial committee meeting at the party headquarters Nawa-e-Subha, Srinagar. Party Vice President Omar Abdullah was also present on the occasion.

    During the breadth of the meeting the functionaries highlighted the contemporary public and party issues, including the inflation, unemployment, rampant demolition drive, and imposition of the property tax. The committee members also gave their estimation of the prevailing ground situation with regards to the deteriorating security situation, development deficit and the rising tide of intolerance against contrarian views in J&K. The underway wanton suppression and prolonged detention of local youth besides plethora of other issues were also raised in the meeting.

    Interacting with the functionaries, Dr Farooq said that the down sliding of democracy has hurt every sector of Jammu and Kashmir without any exception. “The litmus test for a democracy is if the policy decisions are made through democratic procedure and have popular support. Unfortunately the current administration’s decisions sans both!” he said.

    Terming the recent government actions as anti-people and a grave injustice, he said, “Such decisions must be left to a democratically elected government in J&K. It all started with disempowering, disenfranchising our people, now they are dispossessing them. We won’t allow this. If NC comes to power, all these anti people policies have to go lock stock and barrel. We cannot act as mute spectators to the injustices committed by this government. People will punish them through elections as and when they are held. They cannot run away from it for long, one or the other day they have to face the people’s raging anger.” He asked the functionaries to enhance their public contact.

    Party General Secretary Ali Muhammad Sagar, Provincial President Nasir Aslam Wani, Chief Spokesperson Tanvir Sadiq, Senior leaders Choudhary Muhammad Ramzan, Shameema Firdous, Sakina Itoo, Irfan Shah, Dr. Bashir Ahmed Veeri, Ali Muhammad Dar, Mir Saifullah, Nazir Gurezi, Aga Mehmood, Dr Sameer Kaul, Political Advisors to President Mushtaq Guroo, Political Advisor to VP Mudassar Shahmiri, State Spokesperson Imran Nabi Dar, Ahsan Pardesi, Syed Tauqeer, YNC Provincial President Salman Ali Sagar, Ghulam Mohi Ud Din Mir, Dr Sajad Uri, Showkat Hussain Ganaie, Peer Afaq Ahmed, GR Naaz, Abdul Majeed Larmi, Muhammad Khalil Bandh, Sheikh Muhammad Rafi, Shabir Ahmed Kullay, Saif Ud Din Bhat, Dr GN Bhat, Provincial Spokesperson Ifra Jan, Sabiya Qadri, Farooq Shah, Nazir Malik, Hilal Lone, Hashim Hussain, Dr. Syed, Qaisar Jalali, Hilal Akbar Lone, Shahid Ali, Adv Neelofar, Irshad Kar, Reyaz Khan, Reyaz Bedar, Peerzada Faroz, Dr Muhammad Shafi, GH Rahi, Danish Iqbal others were present in the meeting.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Putin’s craven lust for land & power will fail: Biden

    Putin’s craven lust for land & power will fail: Biden

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    Warsaw: In a fiery address from Warsaw’s Royal Castle, US President Joe Biden assured to continue supporting Ukraine as it enters a second year of the ongoing war and said Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “craven lust for land and power will fail”.

    Biden delivered his speech on Tuesday following his historic secret trip to Kiev the previous day and just hours after Putin’s State of the Nation address in which the Russian leader continued his tirade against the West and accused it and Ukraine of starting the war.

    Biden started his address by saying that nearly a year ago “I spoke at the Royal Castle here in Warsaw, just weeks after Vladimir Putin had unleashed his murderous assault on Ukraine”.

    “The largest land war in Europe since World War Two had begun. And the principles that had been the cornerstone of peace, prosperity, and stability on this planet for more than 75 years were at risk of being shattered.

    “One year ago, the world was bracing for the fall of Kiev. Well, I have just come from a visit to Kiev, and I can report: Kiev stands strong. Kiev stands proud. It stands tall. And most important, it stands free,” he said to a thunderous applause from the crowd.

    The President went on to say that when Russia launched its invasion, it wasn’t only Ukraine which was being tested, but the whole world “faced a test for the ages”.

    “Europe was being tested. America was being tested. NATO was being tested. All democracies were being tested. And the questions we faced were as simple as they were profound… One year later, we know the answer.

    “We did respond. We would be strong. We would be united. And the world would not look the other way,” said Biden.

    In his speech, the President singled out his Russian counterpart by name 10 separate times.

    Biden appeared to speak almost directly to Putin in much of the remarks, saying: “Autocrats only understand one word: No. No, no. No, you will not take my country. No, you will not take my freedom. No, you will not take my future. Ukraine will never be a victory for Russia. Never.”

    The American Persident referred to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who he met in Kiev on Monday, as “a man whose courage would be forged in fire and steel”.

    “When President Zelensky came to the US in December (2022), he said this struggle will define the world and what our children and grandchildren, how they live, and then their children and grandchildren.

    “He wasn’t only speaking about the children and grandchildren of Ukraine. He was speaking about all of our children and grandchildren. Yours and mine,” Biden noted.

    In response to Putin’s State of the Nation address in which he said that the West was plotting to attack Russia, Biden said that the “US and the nations of Europe do not seek to control or destroy Russia”.

    “This war was never a necessity; it’s a tragedy. President Putin chose this war. Every day the war continues is his choice. He could end the war with a word.”

    Biden is due to meet leaders of nine countries on NATO’s eastern flank on Wednesday, and he went out of his way to reaffirm American backing for one of the alliance’s key pledges.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • “We are an exceptional international power,” says EAM Jaishankar

    “We are an exceptional international power,” says EAM Jaishankar

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    New Delhi: Highlighting India’s growing stature on the global stage, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday said that “we are an exceptional international power.”

    In an exclusive interview with ANI, he said, “We have been able to very clearly demonstrate to the world that we are exceptional international power, meaning we are willing to do things for others, perhaps more than most of the countries are at this point of time.”

    Speaking on big global issues, he said, “We have been able to demonstrate to the world that we are an exceptional international power. If you look today India’s global standing is clearly very much higher and quite strong. Strategically, there’s much more clarity in our own thinking and operations.”

    “I think the expectation is that India would have a voice, have an opinion, if necessary they would have more than that and this could be climate change, counter terrorism, black money. if you look at the big it could be maritime security, even today trade, investment that domain, technology,” he added.

    He underscored the importance of ‘Vaccine Maitri’ initiative and said, “If you ask me a single thing that we have done in the last ten years which has shaped global views about India, it is ‘Vaccine Maitri.’”

    He also talked about India partnering in groupings like QUAD and others, he said, “India is going up, it’s going well….Why do we have so many partnerships? Because we get along with so many people. How we are to manage different partnerships? Maybe because we are good at it.”

    Speaking on China, he said, “India’s relationship with major powers is good. China is an exception because it violated agreements that we’ve had and has a posture at the border and as a result we have a counter posture. Overall India’s relationship with major powers is good. Relationship with Europe is the best ever we had.”

    He also gave an example of India’s relationship with Russia, saying, “Our relationship with Russia has been extraordinarily steady and it has been steady through all the turbulence in global politics.”

    He also lauded the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, under whom India’s stature on the global stage has increased manifold.

    “Today, India’s global standing is clearly very much higher and quite strong. We’ve been able to demonstrate to the world that we are an exceptional international power,” said Jaishankar on nine years of PM Modi govt’s foreign policy.

    Sharing his views on nine years of PM Modi’s foreign policy, he said, “I think it’s a very solid report card. No one if you look today at our global standing which is a very intangible measure of success but it is very visible measure of success. You ask yourself 2023, when PM Modi convenes a meeting, walks up on a global stage or a conference, how do people react, compare it even with him 5 years ago, perhaps with his predecessors many of them, I would say today our global standing is clearly very much higher but could be quite strong.”

    Jaishankar further stated that there is greater clarity in thinking and implementation of foreign policy and gave example of Neighbourhood First policy.

    “I think there is today much greater clarity in our own thinking and in our own operations and I say that as an implementer of foreign policy. That people know there is Neighbourhood First Policy. Neighbourhood First means build your connectivity and your contacts and this is your first priority, then they know there is an extended neighbourhood to the West towards the Gulf, to the East… to South, Central Asia. There is a set of policies which do that. Then they know there is a policy of engaging the major powers, they know there is an Africa focus. So there is today a lot of strategic clarity about our strategy and that’s necessary if you are serious about,” he said.

    Jaishankar also laid stress on operationalization, saying, “we today do projects in almost 80 countries in the world. You know most Indians don’t realize how much we do abroad and those are often the test of our credibility. There has been huge improvement there. The projects which often lay for years, unfinished, struggling for something, the efficiency of that has improved.”

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Geopolitical power shifts divide the world into three groups

    Geopolitical power shifts divide the world into three groups

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    New Delhi: The geopolitical distribution of power will see a fundamental shift as a result of the war in Ukraine, GIS Reports said. Traditional political alignments will harden.

    Rudolf G Adam, a former vice president of Germany’s Federal Intelligence Service wrote in GIS Reports that the world will remain divided into three groups that face each other with suspicion and open hostility:

    • Western liberal democracies (US, Canada, EU, UK, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand)
    • Russia, Belarus, Iran, Syria, Venezuela and North Korea, with China staying close. Regimes in these countries despise legal constraints both in dealing with other international actors or with their own subjects
    • Developing nations of the South Asian subcontinent, the Arab world and South America

    Adam said international institutions like the United Nations or the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) are paralyzed; regional associations will gather strength. Pressure for reform of the Security Council will rise but will have even lesser chances of success than 20 years ago.

    The main beneficiaries of Russia’s war are China, India, Turkey, Iran and North Korea. They exploit trade opportunities that Western sanctions open for them. They profit from Russian oil at discount prices, Adam said.

    China’s bilateral trade with Russia grew to a record $ 190 billion in 2022, comparable to its trade with Germany. Last year’s China-U.S. trade, meanwhile, also grew to a record $ 691 billion. Chinese exports of finished industrial products rose by almost 40 percent.

    Russia’s protracted war on its western front presents additional opportunities for China to improve its position vis-a-vis Russia’s Far East. China profits most as the two superpowers weaken each other and U.S. attention is diverted from the Pacific to the Atlantic, Adam said.

    India has been quick in buying cheap Russian fuel and in benefitting from supplying what Moscow can no longer obtain directly from the West.

    Turkey is mediating in this war. Communication channels with both sides remain open. Russia’s entanglement in Ukraine has strengthened Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s hand in Syria. Turkey is the only NATO country that has shot down a Russian combat aircraft (in 2015) and is enjoying a privileged position vis-a-vis Moscow, having bought the Russian air defense system S-400 and having its first nuclear power station built by Rosatom.

    Iran and North Korea have assumed a crucial role in weapon supplies. Russia is bound to honour their support at a critical juncture with political (and perhaps technological) support, Adam said.

    Oil-exporting Arab states will see their political influence strengthened in the short term. In the long run, they expect their influence to wane as a sustained turn to renewables will undermine their position as oligopolists of fossil fuels – a strong argument to maximize exploitation of their bargaining power as long as they still have it. OPEC’s recent decision not to expand oil production despite a formal U.S. request is a harbinger of things to come.

    The energy crunch will accelerate a renaissance of nuclear power, with Russia, China, France and the U.S. as leading nations in building and servicing nuclear power plants, Adam said.

    Elsewhere in the Global South, the Ukraine war exposed raw nerves. Most non-Western capitals joined in UN General Assembly votes against Russia’s aggression. But few have condemned Putin publicly or imposed sanctions. Many have reason — trade, mostly, but also historical ties or reliance on Kremlin-linked Wagner Group mercenaries — not to break with Moscow, International Crisis Group said in a report.

    They see picking a side or incurring costs for a war many believe is Europe’s problem as against their interests. Frustration with the West plays a role too, whether over COVID-19 vaccine hoarding, migration policy or climate injustice. Many see a double standard in outrage over Ukraine given the West’s interventions elsewhere and colonial record. Many Global South leaders also believe, particularly when it comes to sanctions, that Western governments have put fighting Russia over the global economy, the report said.

    For China, the war has been mostly a headache. Despite Chinese President Xi Jinping’s public embrace of Putin and continued trade between the two countries that has helped Russia weather sanctions, Beijing’s material support has been lacklustre. Xi has not sent weapons. He appears disturbed by Putin’s travails and nuclear bluster. Beijing does not want to undercut Moscow and is unlikely to compel Putin to reach a settlement. But neither does it wish to provoke Western capitals by abetting the invasion, International Crisis Group said.

    It watches warily as U.S. allies in Asia bolster defences and seem even keener to keep Washington around, even as they still want access to Chinese markets. The war has heightened fears of a Chinese assault on Taiwan. But an invasion that seemed too risky for Beijing in the near term even before the war seems — at least for now — even less likely. The massive sanctions imposed on Russia are not lost on China. Nor are Moscow’s battlefield failures, the report said.

    Russia and Iran have formed a partnership of convenience against Western powers for decades, but that relationship has historically been tinged by an undercurrent of distrust and wariness, experts said, Foreign Policy reported.

    The war in Ukraine may be changing all that, pushing Moscow to embrace Iran as one of its top foreign partners in a bid to secure sorely needed military supplies from Tehran and find lifelines for its sanctions-battered economy — even if that partnership stays below the level of a full-fledged formal alliance.

    “The war in Ukraine changed how Russia viewed its ties with Iran,” said Emil Avdaliani, director of Middle East studies at Geocase, a Georgian think tank, Foreign Policy reported. “Before 2022, bilateral relations were characterized by ambivalence: high talks but little substance. With the war, however, Russia’s turn to Asia has become complete and Iran’s support is now seen as critical in (the) Kremlin.”

    Deepening relations between Moscow and Tehran could end up prolonging the bloody war in Ukraine, U.S. officials and regional experts said, as Iran provides more military support and resources to Russia. At the same time, it could also endanger U.S. allies in the Middle East that oppose Iran if the Russian government delivers new forms of military technology and high-end weapons systems to the heavily sanctioned Middle Eastern power, the report said.

    For Russia, the partnership has yielded Iranian-made drones after Russian officials in the late fall of 2022 quietly clinched a deal with Iran to supply hundreds of weaponized drones to batter Ukrainian cities and civilian infrastructure. (Iran has also reportedly sent military trainers to occupied Crimea to train and advise the Russian armed forces on how to use the drones.) Top Russian officials, including Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev, have reportedly visited Iran in recent months to finalize a deal to purchase Iranian ballistic missiles, Foreign Policy reported.

    “It’s hard to come up with an example of another country that has provided as much support willingly to Russia as has Iran,” said Anna Borshchevskaya, senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Foreign Policy reported.

    On the economic front, both countries are busy building extensive new trade networks aimed at circumventing Western sanctions, including supply routes that can send military equipment from Iran into Russia through river and railway links as well as through the Caspian Sea.

    “If they’ve always been hand-in-glove politically, they’re putting way more emphasis into their economic relationship now,” said Gabriel Noronha, an expert with the Jewish Institute for National Security of America think tank and former U.S. State Department official who worked on Iran issues during former U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, Foreign Policy reported.

    Russia continues to lose influence around the world, above all in the post-Soviet space. The Russian-dominated Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) seems to be the last instrument available to the Kremlin to preserve at least some of the allies in Moscow’s geopolitical orbit, Lowy Institute reported.

    Belarus is the only CSTO member that openly supported Russia’s so-called special military operation in Ukraine. Other Moscow’s nominal allies — Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan — have either taken a neutral stance on the Russian invasion or have started distancing themselves from the Kremlin.

    By invading Ukraine, Vladimir Putin sought to strengthen Russia’s geopolitical standing and spread the country’s influence across the globe.

    In reality, it backfired, Kyiv Independent reported.

    Due to Russia’s unprecedented aggression and its heavy defeats on the battlefield, the Kremlin became much weaker, losing allies in the process.

    Russia’s influence among the former Soviet countries decreased as sharply as it did worldwide.

    The countries on whose support Putin counted the most — many of its former Soviet allies, as well as China, India, and Turkey — are playing both sides, leaving Russia at the table with several rogue states under similar heavy Western sanctions – North Korea, Eritrea, Iran, Syria, and Belarus, Kyiv Independent reported.

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    #Geopolitical #power #shifts #divide #world #groups

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Redmi 10 Power (Power Black, 8GB RAM, 128GB Storage)

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    Redmi 10 Power (Power Black, 8GB RAM, 128GB Storage)

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  • Union minister Rijiju retweets singer Adnan Sami’s post on ‘lust’ for power

    Union minister Rijiju retweets singer Adnan Sami’s post on ‘lust’ for power

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    New Delhi: Law Minister Kiren Rijiju on Saturday appeared to endorse the views of singer Adnan Sami that some people have a lust for power and are frustrated at not having it.

    Rijiju retweeted a Twitter post of Sami, in which the singer-composer said the “problem we face today is that the lust of power and frustration of not having it is so huge, as if it were a withdrawal from an addiction….”

    Sami also said some are even prepared to throw the country under the “world community bus” in order to try and destabilise India and get a chance to rule.

    Sami’s remarks came against the backdrop of billionaire investor George Soros claiming that the turmoil engulfing industrialist Gautam Adani’s business empire may open the door to a democratic revival in India.

    The Congress had said on Friday whether the Adani issue will spark a democratic revival in the country depends entirely on the grand old party and other opposition parties, and has nothing to do with Soros.

    The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had, on the other hand, launched a frontal attack on Soros, accusing him of not only targeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi, but also the Indian democratic system so that people “hand-picked” by the investor get to run the government here.

    “The problem we face today is that the lust of power and frustration of not having it is so huge, as if it were a withdrawal from an addiction, that some r even prepared to throw d country under d world community bus in order to try and destabilise India and try 2 get a chance to rule (sic),” Sami tweeted on Saturday evening.

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    #Union #minister #Rijiju #retweets #singer #Adnan #Samis #post #lust #power

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Power Shutdown: Here Is The List Of Areas

    Power Shutdown: Here Is The List Of Areas

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    JAMMU: Chief Engineer (Distribution) JPDCL, Jammu has informed that the power supply to Bari Brahmana, Industrial Area, Vijaypur, Bishnah, Jakh, Birpur Complex, and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 19 from 8 am to 2 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Kathua City, CTM, Industry Feeder, Hatli Morh, Nagri and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 19 from 9 am to 12 noon.

    Likewise, the power supply to Kalu Chak, BB Town, PHE, Industrial Area Birpur Complex, Bari-Brahmana and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 19 from 10 am to 5 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to Raghunath Bazar, Residency Road, Wazarat Road, Kanak Mandi, Rajinder Bazar and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 19 from 9 am to 2 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to Yatri Niwas, Bhawani Nagar, Gole Gujral, Talab Tillo, Trilokpur, Panjpeer, NITCO Lane and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 20 from 9 am to 3 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to GhoManhasa, Marh, Gajansoo and adjoining areas shall remain affected on February 20 from 9 am to 3 pm.

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    #Power #Shutdown #List #Areas

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )