Tag: security

  • Mitt Romney castigated Biden’s budget chief on Wednesday over Democrats’ insistence that Republicans want to cut Social Security.

    Mitt Romney castigated Biden’s budget chief on Wednesday over Democrats’ insistence that Republicans want to cut Social Security.

    [ad_1]

    20230215 budget 5 francis 1
    It’s the latest instance of cross-party tensions boiling over on how to fix the entitlement program.

    [ad_2]
    #Mitt #Romney #castigated #Bidens #budget #chief #Wednesday #Democrats #insistence #Republicans #cut #Social #Security
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Satya Pal Malik’s Security Cover Downgraded, Omar Abdullah Reacts

    Satya Pal Malik’s Security Cover Downgraded, Omar Abdullah Reacts

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: Former Jammu and Kashmir Governor Satya Pal Malik criticised the Union government for downgrading his security cover.

    In an interview with India Today, Malik said his security cover has been downgraded just because he spoke on the farmers issue and the Centre’s Agniveer scheme.

    Satya Pal Malik said that instead of Z+ security cover, a personal security officer (PSO) would now be deployed for his security.

    “I would like to say that I am not joining any political party. I am not a political person. But if something happens to me, please come to Delhi,” Malik told India Today.

    Maintaining that the security cover of NN Vohra, who served as JK Governor from 2008 to 2018, was still intact, Malik said he has written to the home ministry about the issue but no response has been received so far as to why his security cover was downgraded and what was the reason behind the move.

    India Today reported that while the protocol is to provide lifetime security cover to presidents and prime ministers, security cover is provided to governors and lieutenant governors based on intelligence reports from security agencies.

    Satya Pal Malik was the Jammu and Kashmir Governor in 2019 when the Article 370 of the Constitution was read down and the state was split into two union territories

    Reacting to Malik’s claims, NC Vice president, Omar Abdullah said, “What goes around comes around, jaisa karoge vaisa bharoge. He messed with a lot of peoples’ security, including mine and of my senior colleagues.” Omar wrote on his Twitter.

     

     

    [ad_2]
    #Satya #Pal #Maliks #Security #Cover #Downgraded #Omar #Abdullah #Reacts

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • No ‘security testing’ or ‘crackdown’ plans for smartphone makers: Govt

    No ‘security testing’ or ‘crackdown’ plans for smartphone makers: Govt

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: The government on Wednesday said there are no plans for security testing for smartphones or crackdown on pre-installed applications, as the sole emphasis is on ease of doing business and boosting local electronics manufacturing.

    Responding to a media report, Union Minister of State for Electronics and IT, Rajeev Chandrasekhar, said that there is no “security testing” or “crackdown” plans for smartphone makers at the end of the government.

    “@GoI_MeitY is 100 per cent committed to ‘Ease of Doing Business’ and is totally focused on growing electronics manufacturing to touch $300 billion by 2026,” the minister said in a tweet.

    Electronics manufacturing in the country is likely to cross Rs 1.28 lakh crore in the next financial year, according to Chandrasekhar.

    “The mobile phone production in India had increased from 5.8 crore units valued at about Rs 18,900 crore in 2014-15 to 31 crore units valued at over Rs 2,75,000 crore in the last financial year, as a result of various initiatives of the government, including the ‘Phased Manufacturing programme’,” Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had said during her Union Budget 2023-24 speech in Parliament.

    In the period from April-December 2022, mobile phone exports reached nearly $7-8 billion, and is expected to cross $9 billion for the fiscal year.

    The government has set a target to achieve $300 billion of electronics manufacturing by 2025-26, out of which $75-100 billion of electronics manufacturing is expected from Uttar Pradesh alone, according to the India Cellular and Electronics Association (ICEA).

    [ad_2]
    #security #testing #crackdown #plans #smartphone #makers #Govt

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Security tightened in Jharkhand’s Hazaribag as Ram Navami celebrations begin

    Security tightened in Jharkhand’s Hazaribag as Ram Navami celebrations begin

    [ad_1]

    Hazaribag: Over 3,000 police personnel have been deployed in Jharkhand’s Hazaribag district in view of Ram Navami celebrations that began on Tuesday with the first ‘Mangla Julus’ or procession, a senior official said.

    Strong action will be taken if anyone attempts to disrupt peace in the district, Superintendent of Police Manoj Ratan Chothe said.

    The huge number of policepersons were deployed in Hazaribag town and its nearby areas to instil confidence among the people during the festival, he said.

    CCTVs have been installed in all sensitive areas of the town, and a control room has been set up to monitor the emerging situation, Chothe said.

    Peace committee meetings were being held in all police stations to seek the cooperation of people of all communities, the official said.

    Police staged a flag march in the main thoroughfares of the town just before the Mangla Julus began. It was led by Sub-Divisional Officer (Hazaribag Sadar) Vidya Bhushan Kumar and Sub-Divisional Police Officer Mahesh Prajapati.

    Hazaribag has witnessed several communally-charged incidents during festivals over the years.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Security #tightened #Jharkhands #Hazaribag #Ram #Navami #celebrations

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • EU nears deal to restock Ukraine’s diminishing ammo supplies

    EU nears deal to restock Ukraine’s diminishing ammo supplies

    [ad_1]

    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    BRUSSELS — The EU is finalizing a €2 billion deal to jointly restock Ukraine’s dwindling ammunition supplies while refilling countries’ stocks, according to documents obtained by POLITICO. 

    The plan has two major elements.

    First, the EU will spend €1 billion to partially reimburse countries that can immediately donate ammunition from their own stockpiles. Secondly, countries will work together to jointly purchase €1 billion in new ammunition — the idea being that together they can negotiate bigger contracts at a lower price-per-shell.

    EU ambassadors will discuss the proposal — prepared by the EU’s diplomatic wing, the European External Action Service — during a meeting on Wednesday.

    The scheme — which POLITICO first reported on earlier this month — has come together rapidly in recent weeks in response to Ukraine’s pleas for more ammunition, specifically the 155-millimeter artillery shells it desperately needs to both hold territory and launch a spring counteroffensive.

    And the figures, one of the documents notes, respond “to a specific request made by the Ukrainian minister of defense.”

    The numbers are stark. 

    Estonia, which helped start the conversation in February about how the EU could jointly help fill a looming munitions shortage, has estimated that Russia is burning through 20,000-60,000 shells per day while Ukraine is trying to judiciously only use between 2,000 and 7,000.

    Covering that figure will not come easy — or cheap. 

    Thus far, EU countries have only provided Ukraine with 350,000 155-millimeter shells in total, with the EU spending €450 million on partial reimbursements, said one EU official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive topic. But the official pegged the cost for each new shell at €4,000, meaning costs are growing.  

    To cover both the losses of countries dipping into their stockpiles and funding new ammunition buys, the EU is tapping the so-called European Peace Facility. The little-known fund sits outside of the EU’s normal budget, giving officials the flexibility to use it to cover weapons purchases — once a verboten concept within the EU, a self-proclaimed peace project. 

    Thus far, the facility has been used solely to partially reimburse countries for their weapons donations to Ukraine. Now, documents show countries are willing to funnel an additional €2 billion into the facility — €1 billion to cover some ammunition donations and €1 billion to support joint purchases of replacement shells. 

    GettyImages 1245518169
    Ukrainian artillerymen in the vicinity of Bakhmut, Donetsk | Ihor Tkachov/AFP via Getty Images

    The documents foresee the European Defense Agency, an EU agency meant to better coordinate members’ security efforts, possibly playing a role in coordinating the joint procurement efforts. But individual countries could also help spearhead these negotiations, as long as the country is working with at least two other EU members and not creating competing bids for the shells that drive up prices.

    The joint procurement plan covers not just EU countries but Norway as well — as POLITICO first reported — potentially opening the door to some of the money going to non-EU-based companies. Norway, however, which produces ammunition, is already relatively integrated into the EU market. 

    EU officials are now aiming to get a consensus agreement on the plan during a meeting on Monday of foreign and defense ministers, before getting final sign-off from the 27 EU leaders at a summit in Brussels. 



    [ad_2]
    #nears #deal #restock #Ukraines #diminishing #ammo #supplies
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Hyderabad: Security at Golconda Fort’s Naya Qila attacked

    Hyderabad: Security at Golconda Fort’s Naya Qila attacked

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: A minor scuffle broke out in front of the Golconda Fort’s Naya Qila are in the early hours on Tuesday when a few unidentified drunk men attacked Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) the golf course security personnel who were manning the entry gate. The assailants demanded entry into the Naya Qila area, and reportedly beat up the guards, a few of which were taken to a hospital nearby for treatment.

    Interestingly, additional security was posted at Naya Qila by the ASI after the Hyderabad Golf Course Association (HGA) started expansion works without permission from the authorities a day earlier. Officials said that while the ASI accepted the golf course’s request to allow expansion, the landscaping work required for it would require permission from the ASI without fail. As none was taken, the ASI intervened and got it stopped.

    It may be noted that activists have from years questioned how ancient historic land of the Golconda fort was given to private organisations like the HGA.

    The additional 24-hour security was posted at Naya Qila for that purpose. However, unexpectedly, the known assailants landed up at the location and demanded entry into Naya Qila. Officials from the Golconda police station have also been informed, and a formal written complaint will be given soon, said ASI officials. The cops are reportedly on the lookout for the attackers. It is unsure what their exact motive was, but it is suspected that they are anti-social elements from the surrounding areas

    Naya Qila history

    The Naya Qila area is in fact believed to be about over 400 years old, and is a part of the Golconda dynasty’s (which founded Hyderabad in 1591) remaining heritage in Hyderabad. The Naya Qila area, which is now cut-off from the Golconda fort due to local encroachments, was developed into an external fortification after the first Mughal attack (during the time of Emperor Shah Jahan) on Hyderabad in 1656. 

    It has two huge bastions called Laila and Majnu, of which Majnu continues to be in a state of disrepair after its collapse during monsoons in 2021. The ancient historic site was one of the few places which witnessed damage during heavy rains in 2021 in the fort. The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), which runs the historical site, was supposed to undertake repairs, but that has not happened so far as well.

    Majnu bastion
    The collapsed portion of the Majnu Buruz (bastion), which is located in the Naya Qila area of the historic Golconda fort. The bastion fell when Hyderabad was lashed by heavy rains earlier in October 2020. (Photo: Siasat).

    Other parts of Naya Qila which are open to the public are the Baobab tree, which is believed to be over 400 years old (it is said to have been planted there by African friars), the Mustafa Khan Masjid (which was built in 1561 and predates Hyderabad), and the Mulla Khyali Masjid, which is believed to be named after the Deccan poet Mulla Khyali. 

    While the Majnu Bastion’s collapse is the latest instance of the city’s heritage getting damaged, in the past the HGA had also disallowed the general public from entering the Naya Qila area. However, according the ASI, there is no such restriction and the public is free to visit the place. 

    The Golconda Fort and the Charminar are two monuments that fall under the jurisdiction of the ASI, which works the central government, while all the other heritage sites like the Qutb Shahi Tombs come under the purview of the Archeology Department of Telangana government. Last year, a petition A petition was also created to save Naya Qila and the Golconda fort by local Hyderabadis.

    History of Golconda Fort

    The Golconda Fort’s origins are traced back to the 14th century when the Rajah of Warangal Deo Rai (under the Kakatiya Kingdom which ruled from Warangal) built a mud fort. It was taken over by the Bahmani Empire between 1358 and 1375. Later, it was developed into a full-fledged citadel by Sultan Quli who founded the Qutb Shahi kingdom in 1518 following the death of last sovereign of Bahmani Emperor Mahmud Shah.

    Sultan Quli was a commander and later governor of Tilang (Telangana), under the Bahmani Empire (1347-1518), when its second capital was at Bidar. Sultan Quli, who was originally from Hamadan in Iran, rose to the level of Governor under the Bahmani Empire in early 16th century. At this point of time he was given the fort, around which he began developing a walled-city. It eventually came to be called Golconda Fort (name derived from Telugu Golla-conda, or shepherds hill).

    The fort has 87 bastions, and eight gates, of which a few are not accessible to the general public as they are under the army control. It is believed to be one of the Deccan’s most impregnable forts, and had kept Mughal emperor Aurangzeb’s army at bay for eight months until he succeeded and conquered Hyderabad in 1687.

    Hyderabad was founded in the year 1591 by Mohd. Quli Qutb Shah, the grandson of Sultan Quli, with the Charminar being the city’s foundation. The city turned 429 years old in 2020.

    [ad_2]
    #Hyderabad #Security #Golconda #Forts #Naya #Qila #attacked

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Lifelong LLHSL03 8.6Litres Home Safe Electronic Locker with LED Light | Digital Security Safe for Home & Office with Motorized Locking Mechanism – 0.3 Cubic Feet, (1 Year Warranty, Black)

    Lifelong LLHSL03 8.6Litres Home Safe Electronic Locker with LED Light | Digital Security Safe for Home & Office with Motorized Locking Mechanism – 0.3 Cubic Feet, (1 Year Warranty, Black)

    51fqaig1N+L511E9Wos5vL41Ctl+8pcPL419XTR555FL41MvW5v04pL
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]

    home locker
    Lifelong 8.6Litres Home Safe Electronic Locker comes with LED Light
    0.3 cubic feet home safe for storing important documents, jewellery, and other valuables. Programmable electronic keypad ensures secure, easy operation; back-up key for emergency use​
    Capacity of 8.6L ; 1 Year Warranty​
    Interior measures 6.6 x 9 x 4.7 inches (L x W x H); Exterior space measures 6.7 x 9.1 x 6.7 inches (L x W x H)​
    Heavy-duty carbon-steel construction (11-gauge steel door and 19-gauge steel body); 2 live-door bolts and pry-resistant concealed hinges for superior security. Includes pre-drilled mounting holes and hardware for floor and wall mounting​

    [ad_2]
    #Lifelong #LLHSL03 #8.6Litres #Home #Safe #Electronic #Locker #LED #Light #Digital #Security #Safe #Home #Office #Motorized #Locking #Mechanism #Cubic #Feet #Year #Warranty #Black

  • Biden admin’s cloud security problem: ‘It could take down the internet like a stack of dominos’

    Biden admin’s cloud security problem: ‘It could take down the internet like a stack of dominos’

    [ad_1]

    The cloud has “become essential to our daily lives,” Kemba Walden, the acting national cyber director, said in an interview. “If it’s disrupted, it could create large potentially catastrophic disruptions to our economy and to our government.”

    In essence, she said, the cloud is now “too big to fail.”

    The fear: For all their security expertise, the cloud giants offer concentrated targets that hackers could use to compromise or disable a wide range of victims all at once. The collapse of a major cloud provider could cut hospitals off from accessing medical records; paralyze ports and railroads; corrupt the software that help financial markets hum; and wipe out databases across small businesses, public utilities and government agencies.

    “A single cloud provider going down could take down the internet like a stack of dominos,” said Marc Rogers, chief security officer at hardware security firm Q-Net Security and former head of information security at the content delivery provider Cloudflare.

    And cloud servers haven’t proved to be as secure as government officials had hoped. Hackers from nations such as Russia have used cloud servers from companies like Amazon and Microsoft as a springboard to launch attacks on other targets. Cybercriminal groups also regularly rent infrastructure from U.S. cloud providers to steal data or extort companies.

    Among other steps, the Biden administration recently said it will require cloud providers to verify the identity of their users to prevent foreign hackers from renting space on U.S. cloud servers (implementing an idea first introduced in a Trump administration executive order). And last week the administration warned in its national cybersecurity strategy that more cloud regulations are coming — saying it plans to identify and close regulatory gaps over the industry.

    In a series of interviews about this new, tougher approach, administration officials stressed that they aren’t giving up on the cloud. Instead, they’re trying to ensure that rapid growth doesn’t translate to new security risks.

    Cloud services can “take a lot of the security burden off of end users” by relieving them of difficult and time-consuming security practices, like applying patches and software updates, said Walden. Many small businesses and other customers simply lack the expertise and resources to protect their own data from increasingly adept hackers.

    The problems come when those cloud providers aren’t providing the level of security they could.

    So far, cloud providers have haven’t done enough to prevent criminal and nation-state hackers from abusing their services to stage attacks within the U.S., officials argued, pointing in particular to the 2020 SolarWinds espionage campaign, in which Russian spooks avoided detection in part by renting servers from Amazon and GoDaddy. For months, they used those to slip unnoticed into at least nine federal agencies and 100 companies.

    That risk is only growing, said Rob Knake, the deputy national cyber director for strategy and budget. Foreign hackers have become more adept at “spinning up and rapidly spinning down” new servers, he said — in effect, moving so quickly from one rented service to the next that new leads dry up for U.S. law enforcement faster than it can trace them down.

    On top of that, U.S. officials express significant frustration that cloud providers often up-charge customers to add security protections — both taking advantage of the need for such measures and leaving a security hole when companies decide not to spend the extra money. That practice complicated the federal investigations into the SolarWinds attack, because the agencies that fell victim to the Russian hacking campaign had not paid extra for Microsoft’s enhanced data-logging features.

    “The reality is that today cloud security is often separate from cloud,” Anne Neuberger, the deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology, said last week during a roll-out event for the new cyber strategy. “We need to get to a place where cloud providers have security baked in with that.”

    So the White House is planning to use whatever powers it can pull on to make that happen — limited as they are.

    “In the United States, we don’t have a national regulator for cloud. We don’t have a Ministry of Communication. We don’t have anybody who would step up and say, ‘It’s our job to regulate cloud providers,’” said Knake, of the strategy and budget office. The cloud, he said, “needs to have a regulatory structure around it.”

    Knake’s office is racing to find new ways to police the industry using a ‘hodgepodge’ of existing tools, such as security requirements for specific sectors — like banking — and a program called FedRAMP that establishes baseline controls cloud providers must meet to sell to the federal government.

    Part of what makes that difficult is that neither the government nor companies using cloud providers fully know what security protections cloud providers have in place. In a study last month on the U.S. financial sector’s use of cloud services, the Treasury Department found that cloud companies provided “insufficient transparency to support due diligence and monitoring” and U.S. banks could not “fully understand the risks associated with cloud services.”

    But government officials say they see signs that the cloud providers’ attitude is changing, especially given that the companies increasingly see the public sector as a source for new revenue.

    “Ten years ago, they would have been like, ‘No way,’” said Knake. But the major cloud providers “have now realized that if they want the growth that they want to have, if they want to be within critical sectors, they actually not only need to not stand in the way, but they need to provide tools and mechanisms to make it easy to prove compliance regulations,” he said.

    The push for more regulations isn’t getting immediate objections from the cloud industry.

    “I think that that’s highly appropriate,” said Phil Venables, Google’s chief information security officer.

    But at the same time, Venables argued that cloud providers are subject to plenty of regulation already, pointing to FedRAMP and the requirements cloud providers must satisfy in order to work with regulated entities such as banks, defense industrial base companies and federal agencies — the very tools Knake described as “hodgepodge.”

    The White House outlined a more aggressive regulatory regime in its new cyber strategy. It proposed holding software makers liable for insecure code and imposing stronger security mandates on critical infrastructure companies, like the cloud providers.

    “The market has not provided for all the measures necessary to ensure that it’s not being inappropriately used, that it’s resilient, and that it’s being good caretakers of the small and medium-sized business under its umbrella,” said John Costello, the recently departed chief of staff in the Office of the National Cyber Director.

    Cloud computing companies are “eager” to work with the White House on a “harmonized approach to security requirements across sectors,” said Ross Nodurft, executive director of the Alliance for Digital Innovation, a tech trade group whose members include cloud giants Palo Alto Networks, VMWare, Google Cloud and AWS — the cloud computing arm of Amazon. He also said that companies already comply with existing “extensive security requirements” for specific industries.

    A spokesperson for Microsoft, which is not a member of ADI, referred POLITICO to a Thursday blog post from a Microsoft executive making similar assertions that the company looks forward to working with agencies on crafting appropriate regulations. AWS said in a statement that it prioritizes security but did not address the question of whether it supports additional regulation. Oracle did not respond to a request for comment.

    If the government fails to find a way to ensure the resilience of the cloud, it fears the fallout could be devastating. Cloud providers have effectively become “three or four single points of failure” for the U.S. economy, Knake said.

    According to a 2017 study from the insurance giant Lloyds, an outage at one of the top three cloud providers lasting between three and six days could cause $15 billion in damages.

    Such a collapse could be triggered by a cyberattack on a major cloud provider, a natural or human-caused disaster that disrupts or cuts power to a major data center, or simply a failure in the design and maintenance of a core cloud service.

    If the White House can’t get the results it wants through using existing regulations and cajoling companies into improving practices voluntarily, it will have to hit up Congress. And that could be its biggest hurdle.

    Some Republicans have already criticized the White House’s national cybersecurity strategy for its heavy emphasis on regulation.

    “We must clarify federal cybersecurity roles and responsibilities, not create additional burdens, to minimize confusion and redundancies across the government,” Rep. Mark Green (R.-Tenn.), the chair of the House Homeland Security Committee, and Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.), head of its cyber and infrastructure protection subcommittee, said in a statement last week.

    As gatekeepers of the House Homeland Security Committee, Garbarino and Green wield de facto veto power over any major cybersecurity legislation that the White House might send Congress.

    In the short term, that eliminates the possibility of the more ambitious cloud policy proposals outlined or hinted at in White House’s new strategy

    That could mean that the administration will have to increase pressure on the companies to do more on their own.

    Trey Herr, a former senior security strategist who worked in cloud computing at Microsoft, said cybersecurity agencies could, for example, require the heads of the major cloud providers to appear before top government cyber brass on a semi-regular basis and prove that they’re taking adequate steps to manage the risk within their systems.

    The major cloud providers “have plenty of ways to talk about the security of one product, but few to manage the risk of all those products tied together,” said Herr, who is now the director of the Atlantic Council’s cyber statecraft initiative.

    “It’s one thing to do a good job building a helipad on the top of your house,” he said. Butno one is asking if the house is built to handle that helipad in the first place.”

    [ad_2]
    #Biden #admins #cloud #security #problem #internet #stack #dominos
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Telangana education council to introduce cyber security course for UGs

    Telangana education council to introduce cyber security course for UGs

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: Telangana State Council of Higher Education (TSCHE) has announced that all the universities in the state offering undergraduate courses will also be incorporating cyber security courses from the next academic year.

    Designed and developed by experts from Osmania University and NALSAR University of Law, the course will be availed by the students while they pursue BSc or BA.

    TSCHE chairman Prof. R Limbadri chaired a meeting with the revenue principal, commissioner of technical and collegiate education Navin Mittal and vice chancellors of six conventional universities on Thursday.

    Convening the meeting, Prof. Limbadri said, “Not just creating awareness on the cybercrimes, the new cyber security course will help students with employability opportunities.”

    Apart from cyber security, the university will also be offering BSc (Honours) in Computer Science as a major and artificial intelligence and machine learning as minor subjects from the next academic year.

    Another decision was that private affiliated degree colleges will be granted generic affiliation instead of course-wise affiliation from the next academic year.

    This meant all the BSc Life Sciences or Physical Sciences will be given a single affiliation instead of course-wise as is being done now. The affiliation process will be through the university management system.

    During the meeting, officials reviewed the bucket system that enables students to choose their subject as per their interest.

    TSCHE encourages NAAC grading in UG institutions

    TSCHE on Thursday further decided to encourage all higher educational institutions to go for National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC) grading.

    A seed fund of Rs 1 lakh to the college desirous, will be provided by the council to go for the grading.

    To implement the new initiative, the council will reportedly hold workshops and seminars with resource persons from the NAAC Bangalore on creating awareness of the grading system.

    [ad_2]
    #Telangana #education #council #introduce #cyber #security #UGs

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • AMD 2023 – Security Guard PET Result Released

    [ad_1]

    AMD 2023 – Security Guard PET Result Released

    Name of the Post : AMD Security Guard 2022 PET Result Released

    Total Post : 321

     Atomic Minerals Directorate for Exploration and Research (AMD) has Announced a Notification for the recruitment of Junior Translation Officer (JTO), Assistant Security Officer (ASO) & Security Guard Vacancy.

    Important Links

    PET Result for Security Guard : Click here 

    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

    Install “Sarkari Naukri, Pvt Jobs, Trusted & Breaking News App” Highest Installs in J&K – Click me to Install

    Install The News Caravan App for Android and Iphone

    app installs android

    app installs


    JKSSB Govt Jobs – Check Updates
    Bank Jobs, IBPS, All Banks Updates
    Jammu & Kashmir News Check All Latest News from J&K
    Government Jobs, Private Jobs – Check All Jobs Updates




    [ad_2] #AMD #Security #Guard #PET #Result #Released( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )