Tag: Reopening

  • NTA Re-opening the Registration for Online Application Forms of CUET

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    NTA Re-opening the Registration for Online Application Forms of CUET

    The Registration for Common University Entrance Test [CUET (PG) 2023] was over on 05 May 2023. Correction facility was given to the candidates from 06 to 08 May 2023.

    Examination / SessionCommon University Entrance Examination CUET (PG) – 2023

    Date for receiving online Application Forms: 09 May to 11 May 2023

    Last Date for receiving online Application Forms: 11 May 2023 (Up to 09:00 P.M.)

    Last Date for receiving fee online: 11 May 2023 (Up to 11:59 P.M.)

    Correction in particulars of online Application Form*: 12 May 2023- 13 May 2023

    This opportunity is being provided for all those candidates who could not complete their Registration earlier as well as for those candidates who want to apply as fresh candidates for the CUET (PG) – 2023.

    Dated: 9-5-23

    click link below:

    Re-opening the Registration for Online Application Forms of the Common University Entrance Test [CUET (PG)] – 2023 Examination – reg.  Read More 



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    ( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • Iran, Saudi to exchange envoys after reopening embassies

    Iran, Saudi to exchange envoys after reopening embassies

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    Tehran: The Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman has said that Iran and Saudi Arabia will exchange ambassadors after the reopening of their diplomatic missions.

    Nasser Kanaani said on Monday that the Saudi team arrived in Iran on Saturday to lay the groundwork for the reopening of the kingdom’s embassy in Tehran and consulate general in the northeastern city of Mashhad, Xinhua news agency reported, citing a report by Iran’s official news agency IRNA.

    He added that the Iranian delegation will soon travel to Saudi Arabia for the same purpose ahead of the scheduled reopening of Iran’s embassy in Riyadh and its consulate general and representative office to the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Jeddah.

    MS Education Academy

    Following the signing of a joint statement by Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and his Saudi counterpart Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud in Beijing on Thursday, the two countries have practically resumed official diplomatic relations, Kanaani said.

    Praising China for its “goodwill and positive approach” and “constructive role” in the normalisation of ties between Iran and Saudi Arabia, Kanaani said Beijing had helped complete the diplomatic process that started in Baghdad and Muscat, and bring about a “constructive transformation” in relations between Tehran and Riyadh.

    During their meeting in Beijing on Thursday, the Iranian and Saudi foreign ministers agreed to lay the groundwork for the exchange of economic delegations from public and private sectors, and hold meetings between their joint economic commissions, according to Kanaani.

    Saudi Arabia and Iran reached a deal in March to resume diplomatic relations and reopen embassies and missions in the two countries within two months.

    Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic ties with Iran in 2016 in response to the attacks on Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran after the kingdom executed a Shiite cleric.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Iran #Saudi #exchange #envoys #reopening #embassies

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Iranian team to visit Saudi to prepare for embassy reopening

    Iranian team to visit Saudi to prepare for embassy reopening

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    Tehran: A technical team from Iran will “probably” travel to Saudi Arabia on Tuesday to prepare for the reopening of the Iranian embassy in Riyadh.

    The team would visit the building of the Iranian embassy and prepare the ground for its reopening, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Alireza Enayati, a Director General of the Iranian Foreign Ministry, confirmed that an Iranian technical delegation will visit Saudi Arabia “this week” to do the preliminary work for the embassy’s reopening, without giving the exact date of the trip, the Iran Press news agency on Sunday reported.

    MS Education Academy

    On Saturday, a technical delegation from Saudi Arabia arrived in Iran to assess the situation and discuss the procedures for the reopening of the Saudi embassy and consulate general in the country, according to the Saudi Press Agency.

    On Thursday, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and his Saudi counterpart Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud signed a joint statement in Beijing, announcing the resumption of diplomatic relations.

    Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic ties with Iran in 2016 in response to the attacks on Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran after the kingdom executed a Shiite cleric.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Saudi Arabia’s team arrives in Iran to discuss embassy reopening

    Saudi Arabia’s team arrives in Iran to discuss embassy reopening

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    Tehran: A technical delegation from Saudi Arabia has arrived in Iran to assess the situation and discuss the procedures for the reopening of the Saudi embassy and consulate general in the country.

    Citing the Saudi Press Agency, Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) said that the trip comes following the agreements reached between the two countries in Beijing on the normalization of bilateral ties, Xinhua news agency reported.

    It added during the trip, the Saudi delegation will visit Tehran to discuss the mechanism for reopening the country’s embassy here, and evaluate the situation for the reopening of the Saudi consulate general in the northeastern Iranian city of Mashhad.

    MS Education Academy

    Following their arrival, it said, the team members met with Mehdi Honardoost, director general of ceremonies at the Iranian Foreign Ministry, in Tehran and thanked the ministry’s officials for their warm welcome and for facilitating the delegation’s visit.

    China, Saudi Arabia, and Iran announced on March 10 that the latter two had reached a deal that includes the agreement to resume diplomatic relations and reopen embassies and missions within two months.

    In a meeting in Beijing on Thursday, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and his Saudi counterpart Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud signed a joint statement, announcing the resumption of diplomatic relations with immediate effect.

    Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic ties with Iran in 2016 in response to the attacks on Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran after the kingdom executed a Shiite cleric.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hospitals blame psych bed reopening delay on suicide precautions, staff shortages

    Hospitals blame psych bed reopening delay on suicide precautions, staff shortages

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    outbreak virus new york 41828

    That was one reason cited by Northwell Health for the continuing closure of Syosset Hospital’s 20-bed inpatient psych unit, according to a reopening plan submitted in February. The unit was repurposed for Covid patients in 2020, which required the rapid installation of electrical and gas lines that remain exposed in the rooms.

    “We cannot simply re-open the unit as a psychiatry unit as reconfiguring the rooms requires very significant time and expense,” Manish Sapra, executive director of Northwell’s behavioral health service line, wrote in the plan.

    Sapra said the hospital permanently reassigned the psych unit’s staff at that time and would need about nine months to a year to hire at least 60 people to staff it. The rest of Northwell’s 533 licensed psychiatric beds are online, according to the plan.

    NYC Health + Hospitals described a similar issue with a 24-bed unit at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, which is being used as a medical unit and needs to be reconfigured before it can house psychiatric patients again.

    The system’s plan, which is dated Jan. 18, says it expects to restore 179 of its 253 offline beds by the end of the year. The rest will not be back online until December 2024.

    Health + Hospitals spokesperson Chris Miller said the April 1 deadline does not apply to health systems like the city’s that were already working with the state on a reopening plan.

    “NYC Health + Hospitals is working closely with the state’s Office of Mental Health to reopen 200 psychiatric beds by this December, and we are on track to meet that goal,” Miller said in a statement. “Similar to other health systems, staffing remains the biggest challenge, and we have taken a number of steps to address this — from recruitment campaigns to school loan repayment for staff to new professional development programs.”

    Other hospitals blamed staffing shortages for remaining offline beds. New York-Presbyterian reported in its January reopening plan that Weill Cornell Medical Center’s 32-bed unit could only “safely staff and accommodate” 20 patients, and another 33 beds were offline at its 233-bed Westchester Behavioral Health Center due to “provider and staff coverage constraints.”

    Catholic Health’s Mercy Hospital, which is in Nassau County, said in its plan that it can only operate 29 of its 39 licensed beds due to size constraints and staffing levels and “does not have the ability to open these beds by the April 1st deadline.”

    Key context: As part of her $1 billion mental health plan unveiled in January, Hochul directed hospitals across the state to restore 850 inpatient psychiatric beds that they repurposed or closed during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Hochul released her plan as Democratic lawmakers across the country face increasing pressure to address escalating and often intersecting crises of homelessness and serious mental health concerns in their states and cities.

    Of the 850 beds Hochul told hospitals to reopen, approximately 200 have already been brought back online. Another 300 will become operational by the end of this year, according to the governor’s office.

    “Since Governor Hochul took action to restore psychiatric hospital beds taken offline during COVID, hospitals have developed plans to bring nearly 60% of the missing psychiatric beds online,” Avi Small, a spokesperson for Hochul, said in a statement.

    Small said the state Office of Mental Health is in active conversations with hospitals about how best to achieve compliance.

    State officials have also called on hospitals to restore beds they took offline prior to the pandemic, citing a “need for acute psychiatric inpatient capacity across the State,” according to a January memo first reported by POLITICO.

    “Restoring these beds to active status is a crucial component of the State’s plan to increase the availability of acute inpatient mental health services,” the memo said.

    Under Hochul’s budget proposal, hospitals may be fined up to $2,000 per day for each psychiatric bed that remains offline after April 1, but it is unclear whether the policy will make it into the final budget. The Assembly has proposed eliminating it, and the Senate wants to require the state to first consider mitigating factors.

    More constraints: Long wait times for a spot in other facilities or programs have also squeezed psychiatric capacity at hospitals.

    According to New York-Presbyterian’s reopening plan, its Westchester Behavioral Health Center has an average of 22 patients per day awaiting beds in state-run psychiatric institutions, which are intended for longer stays and typically take referrals from hospital psychiatric units.

    The Westchester facility also reported an average of eight patients per day awaiting placement in a residential treatment center and “routine delays” finding supportive housing units for patients who had arrived unhoused.

    Hochul has pledged to add 150 new beds to state facilities and create 3,500 new units of housing for New Yorkers with mental illnesses in the upcoming state budget. And Mayor Eric Adams has said he would build 8,000 supportive housing units.

    What’s next: Despite Hochul’s directive, some health systems are forging ahead with plans to decrease their numbers of psychiatric beds.

    Mount Sinai Beth Israel has a state license for 92 psychiatric beds but was only operating 64 of those before the pandemic. The hospital is relocating those 64 beds to the bygone nursing home Rivington House, which it is converting into a behavioral health center.

    The system will also decertify 21 psychiatric beds at the Mount Sinai Hospital on the Upper East Side, citing space needs for an expanded cancer hospital and “significant congestion” in the emergency room, according to its reopening plan submitted in January.

    But because Mount Sinai Morningside is reopening a 29-bed psychiatric unit, which had been offline for over a year before the pandemic due to planned renovations, the system claimed a net increase of eight operational psych beds — despite the decrease in licensed beds.

    The system claimed in its reopening plan that it has seen a “decline in the need for inpatient psychiatric hospitalizations for our patients” and would work to expand its psychiatric emergency departments and outpatient programs.

    A Mount Sinai spokesperson declined to comment.

    New York-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital has 49 psych beds across two units that were used for critical care during the pandemic. The hospital restored 24 of those last summer, but the remaining 25 beds “require further assessment and planning,” the system said in its reopening plan, noting its intent to open a behavioral health and primary care center nearby.

    “It is anticipated that this new facility will address the behavioral health needs of the service area,” system executives wrote. “The establishment of this new outpatient program will shape future considerations for inpatient psychiatric care.”

    Angela Smith Karafazli, a New York-Presbyterian spokesperson, said in a statement that the system “remains in active discussions with regulatory agencies about our proposed plan.”

    “At this point we don’t have additional info to share,” she added.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Saudi, Iranian FMs agree to meet ahead of reopening embassies

    Saudi, Iranian FMs agree to meet ahead of reopening embassies

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    Tehran: Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and his Saudi counterpart Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud have agreed to meet at the earliest opportunity to prepare the ground for the reopening of embassies and consulate generals between the two countries, the Foreign Ministry in Tehran announced on Thursday.

    The two Ministers discussed the issues in a phone call to congratulate each other on the starting of the Muslim fasting month of Ramzan, Xinhua news agency quoted the Ministry as saying.

    The Saudi Foreign Minister pointed to the positive achievements of the Beijing meeting, in which the two countries signed an agreement on the normalisation of ties after seven years, and highlighted the necessity of meeting his Iranian counterpart in the near future and the reopening of the embassies.

    Meanwhile, Amir-Abdollahian expressed satisfaction with the detente between Tehran and Riyadh, expressing Iran’s readiness to develop and strengthen bilateral relations.

    China, Saudi Arabia and Iran on March 10 announced that Riyadh and Tehran had reached a deal that included the agreement to resume diplomatic relations and reopen embassies and missions within two months.

    On Sunday, Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud invited Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi to visit Riyadh.

    Following the agreement to restore diplomatic relations, the two nations also announced they will reopen embassies within two months and re-establish trade and security relations.

    Saudi Arabia cut ties in January 2016 after demonstrators stormed its embassy in Tehran after Riyadh had executed the prominent Shia Muslim cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, who was convicted of terror-related offences.

    Since then, tensions between the Sunni- and Shia-led neighbours have often been high, with each regarding the other as a threatening power seeking regional dominance.

    They have been on opposing sides of several regional conflicts, including the civil wars in Syria and Yemen.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • National Testing Agency Reopening of Registration window for Joint Entrance Examination (Main)

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    National Testing Agency Reopening of Registration window for Joint Entrance Examination (Main)

    Registration for Joint Entrance Examination (Main) 2023 Session 2 was over on 12 March 2023. Correction window is opened till 14 March 2023 (up to 09:00 P.M.). Meanwhile, a few representations are being received from the candidates to open the registration window again for applying for Joint Entrance Examination (Main) 2023 Session 2 as they could not complete their registration due to various unavoidable reasons. To support the students community, it has been decided to reopen the registration for receiving online Application Forms for Joint Entrance Examination (Main) 2023 Session 2.

    Examination / Session: Joint Entrance Examination JEE (Main)2023Session 2

    Date for receiving online Application Forms: 15 March to 16 March 2023

    Last Date for receiving online Application Form: 16March 2023(Up to 10:50 P.M.)

    Last Date for receiving fee online: 16 March 2023(Up to11:50 P.M.)

    This opportunity is being provided for all those candidates who applied for JEE (Main) 2023 Session 1 but could not register for JEE (Main) 2023 Session 2 earlier as well as for those candidates who want to apply as a fresh candidate for the JEE (Main) 2023 Session 2.

    contact : 011-40759000

    Dated: 15-3-23

    Click link below:

    Reopening of Registration window for Joint Entrance Examination (Main) –2023 Session 2  Read More 

     



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    ( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • Why China’s reopening could be bad news for the Fed

    Why China’s reopening could be bad news for the Fed

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    That’s why they are closely monitoring China for signs of an acceleration in the global appetite for goods and services. If that happens, it would strengthen the Fed’s resolve to hold interest rates at punishing levels for longer — raising the odds of economic pain in the U.S. later this year and dashing hopes that the country can avoid a recession.

    “There’s an argument — which I’m probably, at this point, more in the camp of … that says, inflation will be persistent longer than we’d like it to be,” Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said in an interview. A prominent reason: “The reopening of China’s going to put pressure on commodity prices.”

    Fed officials mentioned the possible ripple effects from China five times in the summary of their last rate-setting meeting that was released this week. The questions for policymakers: How big a boost will there be to spending, and will it be offset by other events?

    To be certain, there’s a strong upside to a Chinese rebound: Global economic growth is expected to get an additional boost as factories in the manufacturing powerhouse ramp up production and the country’s big-spending tourists begin to travel the world again.

    Yet all of that could lead to higher oil prices, reversing some of the decline in fuel costs that have helped lead to strong drops in overall inflation. The International Energy Agency forecast that demand for oil would increase by 2 million barrels per day this year — nearly half of which would come from China.

    “It frankly is the biggest factor that people are looking at,” said Andrew Lipow, head of Houston-based oil market consulting firm Lipow Oil Associates.

    Meanwhile, the cost of imports could rise — fueling inflation — if more economic growth in other countries leads the dollar to weaken against foreign currencies. Stronger economies translate into stronger currencies.

    At the same time, Beijing’s decision to loosen restrictions on activity could help with the supply shortages that have stoked inflation, which could counteract some of the effects of renewed Chinese demand.

    “I don’t think we can overstate how important that is,” said Eric Robertsen, head of global research at Standard Chartered. “It’s not just T-shirts and baseball caps. A lot of it is higher-value-added stuff too. That should help reduce the supply-demand imbalance around the world, which is not inflationary, it’s disinflationary.”

    China is the world’s largest economy in terms of purchasing power, and two-way trade with the U.S. hit a record $690 billion in 2022, showing how deeply intertwined the two countries remain, though some of that increase is attributable to inflation.

    Beijing is also the largest consumer of global commodities like iron ore and copper, key inputs for a range of construction and manufacturing processes, which could pick up as the economy gathers speed. China’s property market has been in an extended slump since the government cracked down on financing for new homes, slowing construction on already-sold apartments.

    “There’s a question on how much industrial activity is going to pick up — especially in the construction area, which would consume a lot of diesel fuel — given that they have a real estate crisis on their hands,” Lipow said.

    But global demand will also be affected by what’s happening outside of China where many major economies including the U.S. are raising borrowing costs and could see economic slowdowns this year.

    “There is a view, and it’s too early to confirm whether the view is correct or not, that the slowdown in Western economies will offset the improvement in China’s economy,” Robertsen said.

    The oil market in particular is also highly sensitive to unexpected shocks, meaning prices in that sector will depend in no small part on how Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continues to play out.

    “The real question or concern from the Fed’s perspective would not necessarily be these slow-moving factors, but do we see spikes,” said Matthew Luzzetti, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank. “That would be more driven by geopolitical risk events.”

    Both situations are of keen interest within the Fed. According to the minutes of their February policy meeting, officials “saw a number of upside risks surrounding the outlook for inflation stemming from factors abroad, such as China’s relaxation of its zero-Covid policies and Russia’s continuing war against Ukraine.”

    Analysts have also speculated that there could be a boom in so-called revenge spending by Chinese consumers after years of little activity and growing savings. But that effect, too, could be tempered because consumers are still reeling from the economic shock. Traffic on subways and roads has surged in the past six weeks, but unemployment among young adults, Robertsen noted, is still 17 percent.

    “There will be a recovery in China, and it will be strong, but there will be a large part of the population that will be very cautious,” he said.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Big Update Regarding Reopening Of Schools In Kashmir

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    Big Update Regarding Reopening Of Schools In Kashmir – Check Here

    Big Update Regarding Reopening of Schools In Kashmir – Check Here – Job Careers

     

    Big Update Regarding Reopening of Schools: Board Officials

    Srinagar, Feb 17 (KNO): Amid confusion among the teachers of the School Education Department regarding reporting back to their respective institutions after the winter vacations, officials Friday said only teachers of Secondary and Secondary Schools will have to report on February-20.

    The official said that as per the instructions, the teaching staff of High and Higher Secondary Schools will have to report back to their respective schools on February-20.

    According to the news agency Kashmir News Observer (KNO), the official said, “There is no mention of resumption of duties for primary school teaching staff. So it is clear that they would not have to report on February-20.”

    “However, such teaching staff may be ordered to report back to their respective institutions a few days earlier for streamlining the things,” the official said.

    Earlier in November-2022, the School Education Department had said, “The Teaching staff of High and Higher Secondary Schools shall report back to their respective schools on February-20-2023, so that they remain available for making arrangements regarding preparation of ensuing examinations.”

     

    ”All teachers shall remain available on demand for any online guidance of students during vacation period. Any default on part of the Head of the Schools or Teaching staff in observance of the above schedule shall attract strict action under Rules,” it reads—(KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Breaking: Big Update Regarding Reopening of Schools: Board Officials – Kashmir News

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    Only Secondary, Senior Secondary teaching staff to report back on Feb-20: Officials

     

     

    Big Update Regarding Reopening of Schools: Board Officials

    Srinagar, Feb 17 (KNO): Amid confusion among the teachers of the School Education Department regarding reporting back to their respective institutions after the winter vacations, officials Friday said only teachers of Secondary and Secondary Schools will have to report on February-20.

    The official said that as per the instructions, the teaching staff of High and Higher Secondary Schools will have to report back to their respective schools on February-20.

    According to the news agency Kashmir News Observer (KNO), the official said, “There is no mention of resumption of duties for primary school teaching staff. So it is clear that they would not have to report on February-20.”

    “However, such teaching staff may be ordered to report back to their respective institutions a few days earlier for streamlining the things,” the official said.

    Earlier in November-2022, the School Education Department had said, “The Teaching staff of High and Higher Secondary Schools shall report back to their respective schools on February-20-2023, so that they remain available for making arrangements regarding preparation of ensuing examinations.”

    ”All teachers shall remain available on demand for any online guidance of students during vacation period. Any default on part of the Head of the Schools or Teaching staff in observance of the above schedule shall attract strict action under Rules,” it reads—(KNO)


    Post Views: 1,277

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )