Tag: sees

  • TS EAMCET 2023 registration sees unprecedented surge – Here’s why

    TS EAMCET 2023 registration sees unprecedented surge – Here’s why

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    Hyderabad: The Telangana State Engineering, Agriculture, and Medical Common Entrance Test (TS EAMCET) 2023 registration has witnessed an unprecedented surge. As of now, 3,20,587 students have registered for the exam, which is a significant increase from the 2,66,714 students who registered for it last year.

    Out of the total number of registrations, a record 2,05,295 students have applied for the engineering stream, which is 33,057 more than the previous year. For the Agriculture and Medical (AM) stream, 1,15,292 applications have been received, which is 20,816 more than the number of applications received in 2022.

    Addressing a press conference, Telangana State Council of Higher Education Chairman (TSCHE), Prof. R Limbadri, said that the surge in registration can be attributed to the increase in the number of intermediate admissions during the last two academic years. He also cited the craze for engineering courses and BSc Nursing admissions through TS EAMCET 2023 as the reasons for the surge.

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    TS EAMCET 2023 hall ticket download

    Recently, the Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University Hyderabad (JNTUH) has released the hall tickets for TS EAMCET 2023 that can be downloaded by following the simple steps given below:

    1. Visit the official website of TS EAMCET 2023 (Click here).
    2. Click on the link ‘Download Hall Ticket (E & AM)’
    3. Enter the required credentials and click on ‘Get Hallticket’.
    4. The TS EAMCET 2023 hall ticket will appear on the screen. Download it and take a printout.

    Exam schedule

    TS EAMCET 2023 is scheduled to be held from May 10 to May 14. The AM stream test will be held on May 10 and 11, while the engineering stream exam will be conducted on May 12, 13, and 14. It is worth noting that a sitting squad will be deployed at all the examination centers this year to ensure smooth and fair conduct of the exam.

    With the significant increase in registrations, the exam is all set to be a highly competitive and sought-after exam. Students who have registered for the exam are advised to download their hall tickets as soon as possible to avoid last minute rush.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • India-UAE bilateral trade under CEPA sees 16% rise between 2021-22 & 2022-23

    India-UAE bilateral trade under CEPA sees 16% rise between 2021-22 & 2022-23

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    New Delhi: Bilateral trade between India and the UAE under the comprehensive economic partnership agreement (CEPA) has increased from $72.9 billion (April 2021-March 2022) to $84.5 billion (April 2022-March 2023), registering a year-on-year growth of 16 per cent, Commerce Secretary Sunil Barthwal said on the first anniversary of CEPA.

    CEPA is a full and deep agreement which was signed on February 18, 2022, during a virtual summit between Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and President of the UAE and the ruler of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. The CEPA came into force from May 1, 2022.

    During the CEPA implementation period (i.e. from May 2022 to March 2023), bilateral trade increased from $67.5 billion (May 2021-March 2022) to $76.9 billion (May 22-March 2023), showing an annual increase of 14 per cent, official sources said.

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    Exports from India to the UAE have also risen, as during April-March period, Indian exports to the UAE increased from $28 billion to $31.3 billion, an increase of around $3.3 billion or 11.8 per cent year-on-year.

    During the same period, growth in India’s global exports was 5.3 per cent, excluding the UAE, India’s global exports grew at 4.8 per cent.

    During the CEPA implementation period, India’s exports to the UAE increased from $26.2 billion (May 2021 – March 2022) to $28.5 billion (May 2022 – March 2023), a rise of 8.5 per cent.

    During the same period, India’s global exports, excluding the UAE, grew at 3.1 per cent. India’s imports from the UAE have grown to $53.2 billion (an annual increase of 18.8 per cent) during April 2022 to March 2023.

    Non-oil imports during the same period grew by 4.1 per cent.

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    #IndiaUAE #bilateral #trade #CEPA #sees #rise

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Snapchat sees rise in negative reviews as users slam My AI feature

    Snapchat sees rise in negative reviews as users slam My AI feature

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    San Francisco: Snapchat’s AI chatbot — ‘My AI’, which is powered by OpenAI’s GPT technology, has received negative user reviews since its global launch last week.

    Initially available only to subscribers, the AI chatbot is now prominently placed at the top of the app’s Chat tab, allowing users to ask it questions and receive immediate responses. However, the feature’s performance has failed to impress users worldwide, as evidenced by their critical feedback, reports TechCrunch.

    According to data from app intelligence firm Sensor Tower, the average App Store review in the US was 1.67, with 75 per cent of reviews being one-star.

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    In comparison, the average US App Store review for Snapchat in Q1 2023 was 3.05, with only 35 per cent of reviews being one star.

    Moreover, the report said that the number of daily reviews has also increased by five times over the last week.

    Apptopia, another app data provider, reports a similar trend.

    Its findings revealed that ‘AI’ was the top keyword in Snapchat’s App Store reviews over the previous seven days, with 2,973 mentions.

    The firm has assigned the term an ‘Impact Score’ of -9.2. This Impact Score is a weighted index that ranges from -10 to +10 and measures the impact of a term on sentiment, the report mentioned.

    According to Apptopia, Snapchat received approximately three times the number of one-star ratings than its usual amount on April 20, 2023, the day after the global release of My AI was announced.

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    #Snapchat #sees #rise #negative #reviews #users #slam #feature

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Turkey’s tourism sector sees rebound after massive earthquakes

    Turkey’s tourism sector sees rebound after massive earthquakes

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    Ankara: Turkey’s tourism industry is recovering from a major setback caused by the February 6 devastating earthquakes, business insiders said.

    The number of tourism bookings rose by nearly 40 per cent in mid-March compared with that of last year, after a one-and-a-half months slowdown following the earthquakes, said Hamit Kuk, a consultant of the Association of Turkish Travel Agencies.

    The earthquakes struck at a time when the country’s tourism sector was restoring its losses from the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic had led to cancellations or postponement in tourism reservations both from overseas and local markets, Xinhua news agency quoted the consultant as saying.

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    However, the Turkish lira has strengthened the competitiveness of the country’s tourism sector.

    Since 2022, the lira has lost about 70 per cent of its value against the US dollar.

    Favourable exchange rates in the past year have further stimulated the demand for tourism services in Turkey, a tourist destination popular with Russians, Germans and Britons, among other foreign tourists, said Elcin Yildiz, an Ankara-based freelance tourist guide.

    Ali Bahar, president of the Antalya Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said an upcoming nine-day vacation is also expected to boost the domestic demand for tourism services.

    Many Turkish families are expected to combine the upcoming school break with the three-day Eid holiday, which begins on April 21, making it a nine-day vacation.

    However, as Turkey’s tourism industry seeks to reach pre-pandemic levels of reservations, the impact of the earthquakes and the country’s economic woes on domestic demand should not be underestimated, according to Kuk.

    The high inflation has led to a sharp decline in Turkish households’ purchasing power. In addition, the prices of the hotel rooms have increased by 15 to 40 percent due to the recent surge in operation costs, he explained.

    Furthermore, there is no demand for tours in earthquake-hit eastern and southeastern Turkey, which are known for its cultural excursions, he said.

    The tourism industry, which employs about two million people, plays an important part in Turkey’s economy.

    In 2022, Turkey hosted 51.3 million foreign visitors, who contributed $46.3 billion in tourism revenues, up from $38.5 billion in 2019, according to the Turkish Statistical Institute.

    Earlier, Culture and Tourism Minister Mehmet Nuri Ersoy said that the country expects to host nearly 60 million foreign tourists in 2023, and 90 million in 2028.

    The government expects tourism 

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

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    #Turkeys #tourism #sector #sees #rebound #massive #earthquakes

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • How the White House sees its debt ceiling standoff with McCarthy

    How the White House sees its debt ceiling standoff with McCarthy

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    The endgame is still hard to see, weeks or even months away depending on how quickly the nation approaches default. But the political battle entered a new phase this week when McCarthy finally put forth a legislative proposal in his speech Monday, laying out the spending cuts Republicans wanted in exchange for a one-year debt ceiling increase — and giving the White House officials something specific to attack.

    And attack they have. Biden’s speech Wednesday at a Maryland union hall served as a summation of his team’s theory of the case. And White House aides have made it clear they’re eager to continue talking about this, whether through emails from the press shop, Cabinet officials describing the specific impacts of proposed cuts or at the briefing room podium.

    On Friday, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called McCarthy’s proposal a “ransom note” and emphasized a new VA analysis on the impact of proposed GOP cuts on veterans healthcare. The president’s economic agenda, the White House believes, is popular. Repealing laws that have helped the middle class and created jobs, cutting taxes for corporations and the rich, and risking default are not.

    Republicans, Biden asserted Wednesday, “say they’re going to default unless I agree to all these wacko notions they have. Default. It would be worse than totally irresponsible.”

    He reminded McCarthy of the GOP’s hypocrisy — they had no problem raising the debt ceiling three times during the Trump presidency — and of Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump’s own comments decrying debt limit brinkmanship as reckless. Biden also urged the speaker to “take default off the table, and let’s have a real, serious, detailed conversation about how to grow the economy, lower costs and reduce the deficit.”

    According to two people familiar with the administration’s strategy, it’s not clear to anyone inside the White House if McCarthy has the votes from his own caucus to pass his bill, and it may not yet be clear to the speaker himself, who has what one person familiar with the White House’s thinking termed a “principal-agent problem.”

    The bill would be dead on arrival in a Democrat-controlled Senate. But the White House is signaling clearly to GOP moderates in the House: Vote to cut popular programs, including Social Security and Medicare, at your own risk.

    “If they pass this, we are going to hang it around their moderates’ necks,” said one person familiar with the administration’s thinking.

    Chad Gilmartin, a McCarthy spokesperson, said “the White House is clearly having trouble defending President Biden’s reckless spending and irresponsible refusal to negotiate with Speaker McCarthy on the debt limit.”

    He added: “It’s no surprise that the administration now has to fall back on crazy accusations against the only plan in Congress that would avoid default.”

    But Biden, his aides say, learned from the Obama administration’s 2011 standoff with Republicans that it’s imperative not to allow the debt ceiling to become part of negotiations. But with McCarthy’s tenuous speakership constantly hanging by a thread, and dependent in large part on his ability to placate his most extreme members, the White House knows that talking him off the ledge on risking default — giving up what he sees as his main point of leverage — won’t be easy.

    And as much as White House officials like the politics of the negotiations’ current phase, they know they, too, will face pressure to negotiate the closer they get to D-Day.

    The window for scoring points, in fact, could be quite short as the danger of default grows. Goldman Sachs economists this week said that, due to weaker than expected tax season revenues, the U.S. could hit the debt ceiling in early June, earlier than expected. Within the administration, there are some differences in the level of alarm, as senior officials focused on economic matters have privately expressed more concern about the serious possibility of default than others whose purview is politics, according to one senior administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak freely.

    Already, some Democrats are urging Biden to engage with McCarthy sooner rather than later. But at this point, Biden would be unlikely to say anything different to the speaker in private than what he’s said publicly — he’s open to a bipartisan deal on spending but only after lawmakers authorize a clean debt ceiling increase. That said, Jean-Pierre Friday wouldn’t go as far as to say that Biden would only meet with McCarthy after he puts forth a clean debt ceiling hike.

    And there’s doubt inside the West Wing about whether McCarthy is ready for a meeting. Some aides believe it will take mounting pressure from the business community for the speaker to relent and that, given the difficult politics within his own caucus, he may not be able to back down. In such a scenario, the White House hopes that the House might at the very least swallow a Senate-passed bill to avoid default, if some Republicans are willing to use a discharge petition to get such a bill to the floor.

    But some in the administration are less confident about that scenario coming to fruition than the White House is at the moment about the current contours of the debate. Senate Republican Leader “Mitch McConnell as the backstop is scary,” the senior administration official said.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Lebanon’s real estate sector sees major slowdown as financial crisis deepens

    Lebanon’s real estate sector sees major slowdown as financial crisis deepens

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    Beirut: The development of Lebanon’s real estate sector is slowing down, with demand for properties falling by around 80 per cent in 2022 and 2023 compared to the years before the ongoing financial crisis which first erupted in 2019, according to economists.

    Nassib Ghobril, head of the economic research department at Byblos Bank, told Xinhua news agency that demand for properties has dropped by at least 80 per cent in the four years after the crisis, due to the lack of market liquidity.

    In 2020 and 2021, buyers could still pay for their properties through cheques, which were needed by the real estate developers to settle their bank loans, said Ghobril.

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    However, after paying off most of their bank debts, the developers only accepted cash, making it very difficult for Lebanese buyers to afford properties as the bankrupt banks froze tens of billions of dollars saved in their accounts, he noted.

    Adnan Rammal, a real estate developer and representative of the trade sector in the Economic and Social Council, attributed the decline in demand to Lebanese buyers’ reduced purchasing power following the devaluation of their currency as a result of the severe financial crisis.

    Before the crisis, according to Rammal, around 60 to 70 per cent of properties sold were small apartments priced at approximately $150,000.

    However, buyers of these apartments, mostly employees paid on wages, saw their purchasing power decreased a great deal during the crisis.

    Making matters worse, the collapse of the banking sector made those employees who relied significantly on loans no longer had access to them.

    According to developers, the sharp decrease in property demand in Lebanon led to a price drop of around 50 per cent from pre-crisis levels.

    Developers have stressed the necessity for the government to take urgent measures to revive the real estate market and some other sectors of the economy.

    Rammal said that the banking sector must be restructured in order for it to provide loans to buyers as before.

    The economic and financial crisis that started in October 2019 has been further exacerbated by the dual economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, and the massive Port of Beirut explosion in August 2020, according to the World Bank.

    Of the three, the economic crisis has had by far the largest (and most persistent) negative impact.

    In July last year, Lebanon was reclassified by the World Bank as a lower-middle income country, down from upper middle-income status.

    Unemployment has also increased from 11.4 per cent in 2018-19 to 29.6 per cent in 2022.

    Earlier this month, the Lebanese currency collapsed to 100,000 LBP per US dollar for the first time in history.

    Lebanon’s economists have been calling on authorities to elect a new president and form a new cabinet to end the political deadlock and allow the country to implement necessary reforms and stop the collapse.

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    #Lebanons #real #estate #sector #sees #major #slowdown #financial #crisis #deepens

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sri Lanka sees increase in tourism earnings in first quarter

    Sri Lanka sees increase in tourism earnings in first quarter

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    Colombo: Amid the ongoing economic crisis, Sri Lanka has witnessed an increase from tourism earnings with around $530 million being received in the first three months of 2023, according to the latest data from the country’s central bank.

    Sri Lanka earned $198.1 million in March, bringing tourism earnings in the first quarter to $529.8 million, the data showed.

    In the first three months of 2022, Sri Lanka earned $482.3 million from tourism, reports Xinhua news agency.

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    A tourism official said earlier this month that Sri Lanka’s tourism industry is aiming to attract 2 million visitors in 2023, compared to the previous target of 1.5 million.

    Tourism, one of Sri Lanka’s leading foreign exchange earners, suffered a setback due to the Covid-19 pandemic as well as economic and political crises in the country.

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    #Sri #Lanka #sees #increase #tourism #earnings #quarter

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • India sees highest one-day rise in Covid cases since September 2022

    India sees highest one-day rise in Covid cases since September 2022

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    New Delhi: India on Wednesday reported 4,435 new Covid-19 cases, the highest single-day jump since September 2022, according to the Union Ministry of Health and Family Affairs.

    The number of active cases stands at 23,091, the data showed.

    With the surge in the past 24 hours, the tally has climbed to 4,47,33,719. Also, 15 deaths reported during the same time span has pushed the toll to 5,30,916.

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    As per the ministry data, the national Covid recovery rate was pegged at 98.76 per cent.

    While one death each was reported from Delhi, Gujarat, Chhattisgarh, Haryana, Karnataka, Puducherry and Rajasthan, four each were reconciled by Maharashtra and Kerala.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Pakistan’s Lahore sees surge in crime rate amid inflation spike

    Pakistan’s Lahore sees surge in crime rate amid inflation spike

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    Lahore: As Pakistanis are struggling to make the ends meet amid the rise in inflation, Lahore is seeing a massive surge in street crime, reported Dawn.

    According to the official data, the crime rate in the first three-and-a-half months of the year shows that over 90 percent of them have been committed at gunpoint. This shows that robbers are fearless and brandish illegal weapons in the city to deprive the citizens of cash and valuables. The criminals are so desperate and fearless of the police action that they are even lifting bicycles too.

    The data also revealed that 143 bicycles were stolen from various parts of the provincial capital during the first three-and-a-half months of this year besides 5,366 motorcycles.

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    Lahore has six police divisions, 35 circles, and 84 police stations. Each division is headed by a superintendent of police (SP) while circles are headed by sub-divisional police officers (SDPOs), reported Dawn.

    But despite the appointment of so many police officers in such a large number, the criminals are on the rampage, looting and depriving citizens of their belongings fearlessly. The official data shows that 89 citizens have been allegedly murdered in Lahore in about the first quarter of 2023.

    Most of the murder incidents – 20 each – were reported in City and Saddar divisions.

    Meanwhile, in Islamabad, provincial’s Interior Minister Abdul Rehman Kanju admitted that the street crime rate has increased in the provincial capital, Dawn reported.

    According to a Pakistani newspaper, Kanju claimed that the increase in the population has led to a spike in street crime cases, according to Dawn.

    However, he claimed that the government was taking effective steps to ensure the safety of citizens.

    The minister made these comments while responding to a calling attention notice, moved by PTI Member of National Assembly (MNA) Asiya Azeem regarding the increase in crimes against women in Islamabad, Dawn reported.

    Giving details about the measures that the Pakistan government has taken to control crime, Interior Minister said that Eagle Squad had been formed to patrol streets on motorcycles, claiming that there had been a significant decline in the crime rate since the formation of the squad.

    Kanju claimed that since the start of the year, not a single case of house robbery had been reported in the capital, reported Dawn.
    Regarding the crimes against women, Kanju claimed that it was because of the government’s directives to the police to register every first information report (FIR) in this regard.

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    #Pakistans #Lahore #sees #surge #crime #rate #inflation #spike

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • COVID: India sees highest single-day rise in five months

    COVID: India sees highest single-day rise in five months

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    New Delhi: India recorded a single-day rise of 2,151 new coronavirus cases, the highest in five months, while the active cases increased to 11,903, according to the Union health ministry data updated on Wednesday.

    A total of 2,208 cases were recorded on October 28 last year.

    The COVID-19 death toll has increased to 5,30,848 with seven latest fatalities — three reported by Maharashtra, one by Karnataka and three reconciled by Kerala.

    According to the data updated at 8 am, the daily positivity was recorded at 1.51 per cent, while the weekly positivity was pegged at 1.53 per cent.

    The total tally of Covid cases was recorded at 4.47 crore (4,47,09,676).

    The active cases now comprises 0.03 per cent of the total infections, while the national COVID-19 recovery rate has been recorded at 98.78 per cent, according to the ministry website.

    The number of people who have recuperated from the disease surged to 4,41,66,925, while the case fatality rate was recorded at 1.19 per cent.

    According to the ministry’s website, 220.65 crore doses of Covid vaccine have been administered in the country so far under the nationwide COVID-19 vaccination drive.

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    #COVID #India #sees #highest #singleday #rise #months

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )