Settle India, an auxiliary of the Swiss worldwide food and refreshment monster, Settle S.A., encountered a significant decrease in its stock cost during the most recent exchanging meeting. This slump comes in the midst of worries over worldwide monetary circumstances and progressing production network disturbances that have been influencing different areas, including the purchaser merchandise industry.
Settle India (NSE: NESTLEIND), a conspicuous player in India’s food and refreshment area, saw its portion cost tumble by 4.2% during the exchanging meeting on Monday. The decay was huge, with the stock exchanging at INR 17,450 for every offer, down from its past shutting cost of INR 18,200 for each offer.
Market examiners quality this abrupt drop in Settle India’s stock cost to the more extensive monetary difficulties and vulnerability pervasive in the worldwide market. The continuous worldwide store network issues, combined with rising expansion and pandemic-incited disturbances, have affected organizations across enterprises, making financial backers careful.
Settle India, known for its famous brands like Maggi, Nescafe, and Pack Kat, has been endeavoring to explore these difficulties and keep up with its market position. Be that as it may, the most recent dunk in share costs has featured the weakness of even settled players on the lookout.
Rajesh Sharma, a senior examiner at a main financier firm, remarked on the circumstance, saying, “The decrease in Settle India’s stock cost mirrors the ongoing business sector opinion, which is set apart by a serious level of vulnerability. Financial backers are intently checking the way in which organizations are dealing with their stockpile fastens and adjusting to changing business sector elements.”
Settle India’s supervisory crew has been effectively tending to these worries. They have accentuated the organization’s obligation to guaranteeing the accessibility of its items to shoppers while keeping up with quality norms. In an explanation, the organization representative commented, “We are intently observing the developing circumstance and have executed systems to relieve store network disturbances. Our need stays to fulfill the needs of our esteemed clients.”
While the new drop in share costs is a reason to worry, a few specialists accept that Settle’s areas of strength for India value and broadened item portfolio could assist it with enduring the continuous financial difficulties. Be that as it may, the unpredictability in the market is supposed to endure until greater lucidity arises on the worldwide financial front.
Financial backers and examiners will be intently looking for refreshes from Settle India and its administration as the organization keeps on exploring the complex monetary scene and endeavors to recuperate from the new stock cost decline.
The Paytm Phenomenon: A Brief Overview of India’s Digital Payment Giant
We introduce Paytm and give a brief overview of the company’s history, its contribution to the development of India’s digital economy, and its emergence as a trailblazer in the fintech sector.
Riding High: Paytm’s Share Price Performance Over the Years
This section provides a historical perspective on the share price of Paytm while emphasizing significant turning points, recurring themes, and growth trends that have shaped the company’s path to the stock market.
Unpacking the Influential Factors: What Drives Paytm’s Share Price Fluctuations
We go into the details and examine the key variables, such as financial performance, market sentiment, and industry trends, that affect Paytm’s share price swings.
Navigating Market Trends: How External Factors Impact Paytm’s Valuation
We investigate how external, uncontrollable factors, such as investor mood and global economic conditions, might affect Paytm’s value and share price.
Regulatory Winds: The Role of Government Policies in Shaping Paytm’s Share Price
In the fintech industry, regulatory reforms and governmental regulations are vital. We look at how changes in regulations may affect the share price of Paytm and its capacity to deal with regulatory obstacles.
The Zomato IPO Frenzy: A Promising Debut on the Stock Market
Zomato’s initial public offering (IPO) was a critical turning point for both the business and the Indian startup scene. Zomato’s shares listed at a premium during the IPO, which attracted intense investor interest and demonstrated high confidence in the company’s development potential. The market’s reaction was highly favorable, which was a reflection of investors’ excitement regarding the expanding meal delivery industry and Zomato’s dominant market share.
Riding High and Weathering Storms: Zomato’s Roller-Coaster Share Price Journey
Zomato’s share price rode a wave of euphoria in the early months after its IPO, hitting new highs and drawing interest from both domestic and foreign investors. However, the euphoria was followed by times of volatility, as with any dynamic market. Zomato’s stock price fluctuated, which was a result of general market trends, industry dynamics, and company-specific changes.
Market Attitude: The share price of Zomato is significantly influenced by both domestic and international market attitudes. Significant price changes can be triggered by changes in macroeconomic variables, geopolitical situations, and investor emotion.
Zomato competes in a sector that is rife with competition. Share price variations can be impacted by changes in market share, competitive strategy, and shifts in customer preferences.
Regulatory Environment: Zomato’s business operations and, consequently, its share price, may be impacted by government rules and policies relating to e-commerce and food delivery.
Financial Performance: Investors and analysts pay particular attention to Zomato’s quarterly financial performance, sales growth, profitability, and expansion plans. Share price changes can be influenced by either positive or negative shocks in financial performance.
Innovation in technology: The capacity of the business to
Mumbai: After the success of Shah Rukh Khan starrer Pathaan, Yash Raj Films is busy constructing its own spy verse. The production house is hitting headlines for its new projects and it has brought Salman and Shah Rukh together in cameo roles in each other’s movies. The production house now wants to create a spy universe with characters from films like Pathaan, WAR and Tiger. A report recently claimed that YRF is planning a movie in which Deepika Padukone and Katrina Kaif will be playing lead roles.
Yes, you read it right. The Twitter handle of Lets Cinema claimed that YRF is developing a high-budget female-centric spy film in which Deepika and Katrina will play lead roles. Deepika was seen in Pathaan and Katrina will be seen in Tiger 3 and both films are of YRF.
Quoting YRF’s official, an exclusive report in LetsCinema read, “We have movies in the West where Hollywood actresses lead a spy universe but it will be a first in India. Of course, we have had smaller films but this would be the first time that a big studio would mount something on a huge scale.”
YRF is already planning to bring Salman and SRK together in lead roles in a film titled ‘Tiger Vs Pathaan and it is expected to hit screens in 2024 or 2025. The production house’s war2 which stars Hrithik Roshan aka Kabir back again as Fighter in the Siddharth Anand film will release in first quarter of 2024. Before War2, Salman Khan starrer Tiger 3 will hit the screens.
As the production house is planning to make its own spy universe, netizens reacted to the news poster shared by LetsCinema on Twitter. Some of the users are of the opinion that Ranbir Kapoor should play the role of the villain in the movie while others commented that Alia should play a cameo and the movie should be named ‘Women of Ranbir’.
Actually, Ranbir Kapoor was in love with Deepika Padukone and Katrina Kaif before marrying his soulmate Alia Bhatt. Netizens are relating Ranbir Kapoor’s personal life with the next movie of the YRF universe.
Adani Group’s power business arm, Adani Power, continued its upward trend for the eighth trading session, with its share price rising by 2.78 percent to Rs. 242.50 today.
The share price surge has been an impressive 29.47 percent in just 14 days, as it has risen from Rs 187.30 on April 19. This impressive rise in the share price of Adani Power has helped the company recover 78.08 percent from its 52-week low of Rs 132.55, which was seen on February 28, 2023.
Buy, sell or hold Adani Power shares?
While the share price of Adani Power dipped earlier due to the Hindenburg report, it has now recovered significantly. However, technical analysts have mixed opinions about the further rise of Adani stocks.
Some predict that the stock will rise to Rs 265-290 levels, while others suggest profit booking. Investors are advised to exercise caution and do their due diligence before investing in Adani stocks.
Gautam Adani’s net worth surges
The surge in Adani Power’s share price has also resulted in an improvement in the net worth of Gautam Adani, Chairman of Adani Group. Today, he emerged as the top winner on the world’s rich list, as his net worth surged by USD 520 million.
Today’s top five winners
Name
Current net worth (in billion USD)
Change in net worth (in million USD)
Change in net worth (in percentage)
Country
Jeff Bezos
126.7
+1600
+1.25
US
Hubert Burda
4.7
+503
+11.89
Germany
MacKenzie Scott
27.9
+420
+1.53
US
Gautam Adani
50.6
+413
+0.82
India
Radhakishan Damani
16.1
+266
+1.68
India
Today’s top five losers
Name
Current net worth (in billion USD)
Change in net worth (in million USD)
Change in net worth (in percentage)
Country
Carl Icahn
14.7
-2900
-16.26
US
Warren Buffett
113.3
-2100
-1.83
US
Colin Zheng Huang
22.6
-1600
-6.41
China
Larry Page
90.7
-1400
-1.53
US
Mark Zuckerberg
85.2
-1400
-1.58
US
Though the rise in the share price of Adani Power has been impressive, and the company has recovered well from the dip it experienced earlier, it remains to be seen whether the stock will continue its upward trend or not.
New Delhi: With a likely Joe Biden vs Donald Trump redux in the impending 2024 US presidential elections, the Indian-Americans — comprising slightly more than 1 per cent of the total US population and less than a per cent of all registered voters — will be in the spotlight once again, courtesy their growing political, social and economic clout.
While they are concentrated in states like New York, New Jersey, California and Texas, Indian-Americans have begun to matter more in the closely-contested states, and their votes might turn out to be decisive in case of swing states like Georgia, Pennsylvania and Michigan.
In general, Indian-Americans have largely sided with the Democrats, but like in the last elections, both Democrats and Republicans will leave no stone unturned to attract a community that can play a pivotal role — from campaigning to endorsing candidates to fundraising for the elections.
According to media reports, for his 2024 campaign, Biden is bringing together a newer generation of diverse leadership along with experienced advisors who helped him win the White House in 2020.
The South Asians for America (SAFA), a grassroots organisation dedicated to education, advocacy, and mobilisation of the South Asian community, recently announced that they will endorse both Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 run.
“By re-electing President Biden and Vice President Harris, we hope to continue to strengthen our democracy at home, advance our democratic values, and continue to strengthen our global alliances in an ever-changing global landscape,” said Neha Dewan, National Director of SAFA.
Biden’s major fundraisers, which include Indian-Americans, had helped raise at least $100,000 for his 2020 campaign.
To name a few, a likely list includes prominent Indian-American community organisations and leaders like Ajay Bhutoria, Frank Islam, Raj Shah, Ramesh Kapoor, Indian-American Impact, Indiaspora and AAPI (Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) Victory Fund.
Trump, meanwhile, had won over Indian supporters with events like ‘Howdy Modi’ and for his open support and friendship for India in the past.
During his re-election campaign in 2020, he had launched four new coalitions — ‘Indian Voices for Trump’, ‘Hindu Voices for Trump’, ‘Sikhs for Trump’ and ‘Muslim Voices for Trump’ — to amass support from these communities.
This year, Shalabh ‘Shalli’ Kumar, a fierce Trump supporter, has been appointed the national chairman of a new Republican Hindu and Indian American coalition, according to a Republican National Committee announcement.
The two coalitions, apart from building and mobilising Hindu and Indian American communities across the US, will assist the indicted leader in his 2024 campaign. An official word is awaited, though.
Apart from Chicago-based industrialist Kumar, who was also the financial backer and chair of the 2016 Indian Americans for Trump Campaign, loyalist Kash Patel, who joined the Trump administration in 2019, continues to serve as a key political advisor to Trump.
Patel’s staunch loyalty towards Trump scored brownie points from former advisor Roger Stone who remarked that the former president named his dog “Kash” as an “homage” to Patel.
Since Trump formally announced his re-election bid in November, Patel has been reportedly mentioned on right-wing media as a potential contender for attorney general or CIA director, according to ABC News.
“If Trump’s back in, I’m back in,” Patel, a former federal prosecutor and senior intelligence official, had said in a December interview.
Other top Trump supporters include, Danny Gaekwad, who has raised funds for all Republican presidential candidates since George W Bush, Sridhar Chityala, who is on the advisory board of Indian voice for Trump Coalition, Rick Desai, Dr Sampat Shivangi, Shridhar Chityala, and Prem Parameswaran to name a few.
“It was an incredible, emotional moment for me to spend time with her,” Andriy Shevchenko says as he describes meeting a little Ukrainian girl called Maryna last month. The most famous former footballer from Ukraine, who won the Ballon d’Or in 2004 and the Champions League with Milan before he also coached his country at Euro 2020, pauses as he reflects on a simple encounter where he kicked a football back and forth in hospital with the six-year-old.
The images of their kickaround assume a grainy resonance when it is explained that Maryna had become the first child in Ukraine to receive a prosthetic limb after her leg was blown off by a Russian missile last year. For many weeks she barely moved. Finally, when she was well enough to sit up, her doctors started the slow process of her rehabilitation by using a football. Maryna learned to balance on her prosthetic leg while using her good foot to kick the ball.
For Shevchenko, Maryna represents the courageous spirit of Ukraine but he concedes: “It’s very sad to say it like that because she is so young to have been in that condition. But she shows everyone she’s very strong coming back from a terrible injury. It took her some time, especially emotionally, to recover. But she is so brave.”
The 46-year-old, who won 111 caps for Ukraine, leans forward, his eyes shining with emotion as he describes playing football with Maryna at the Ohmatdyt Children’s Hospital in Kyiv. “I saw her start smiling. The doctor came to me and said: ‘Andriy, she’s been here for four months and we never saw her even smiling.’ Then she gets excited, playing with the ball, and she kicked it back to me with both legs. She was very enthusiastic.
Andriy Shevchenko with Maryna, the first child in Ukraine to receive a prosthetic limb after her leg was blown off by a Russian missile. Photograph: Andrii Yushchak/UNITED24
“I saw a lot of kids in the paediatric hospital and many of them were in a very difficult condition. The next day I went to another hospital where I met soldiers, who are really just boys of 18 or 19, and they have no legs, no arms.”
Shevchenko’s four sons are aged between nine and 18 and, on an otherwise ordinary Wednesday afternoon at his home in London, he nods gently when I ask whether this most recent visit to Ukraine made him think of his own boys. “Of course. But I think it’s good we’re speaking because I want the world to understand the damage. The images of destruction and the bombs coming can be seen on television but the personal feeling after you go inside the hospitals is absolutely different. You feel the pain of people. So I want to share with the world what Ukrainian people are feeling.
“These young soldiers are defending the frontline, risking their lives, and there are civilian [casualties] too. When you go to Ukraine you always know it can happen to anyone. You accept that. Everyone who moves inside the war zone knows. But it’s more dangerous to be close to the frontline and you see so many families and young children who stayed there. We need to support these people when they have to recover in hospital. But we also need some human relationships with them, to encourage people after such a difficult injury to have a desire to live, to continue life. Most of them, I’m sure, can recover back to normal life – like Maryna.”
How did Shevchenko try to comfort the young soldiers who had lost limbs in the war? “I just want to give them attention. I walk in, give him a big thank you for his service, for defending Ukraine. It is one of the hardest moments, going to these hospitals, but it becomes a good feeling to say thanks to them from everyone.”
Shevchenko’s words carry even more weight after the latest wave of bombing across Ukraine. In the early hours of Friday Russia fired more than 20 cruise missiles and two drones at Kyiv and other cities. The haunting sound of air raid sirens echoed around a darkened Kyiv for the first time since early March. There are reports of at least 25 more deaths and of children being rescued from the rubble of their destroyed homes.
We return to the early hours of 24 February 2022 when the war began. “I remember going to sleep the night before,” Shevchenko says. “I was very nervous but I still believed it would be OK because it’s impossible they start a war with no reason. Until then we believed that Russia would not attack Ukraine. But I did not feel peaceful. I left my phone close to me because I was in London and my mother was in Kyiv.”
Andriy Shevchenko playing football with children in Borodianka. Photograph: Andrii Yushchak/UNITED24
Shevchenko is briefly silent as the memories flood through him. “It was three in the morning for me,” he continues, “and 5am in Ukraine. I open my eyes because my mum phoned me. I already know what it means. You don’t know for how long we’re going to be in this war but you know something terrible has happened. When the first attack started some important military bases around the airports were hit by missiles. My mum lives pretty close to one of them and she felt that explosion and called me immediately. She was scared and disoriented. She was crying and so I knew. War had started.”
His mother and sister left Ukraine six weeks later. “My mum didn’t feel well,” he explains, “and so my sister took her and their two dogs across Ukraine, close to the border. When they could they crossed the border and went to Italy. So they are safe but they have been three times back in Ukraine. They go back and forth. We all do. I try to go to Ukraine every month.”
The family’s close links with Italy are rooted in his successful years with Milan. Shevchenko scored 173 goals in 296 gamesbetween 1999 and 2006, reaching two Champions League finals. In 2003 he scored Milan’s winning penalty in a dramatic shootout in the final against Juventus while, two years later, his spot-kick at the same stage was saved by Jerzy Dudek in the Liverpool goal. That missed penalty meant Liverpool won the shootout, having been 3-0 down at half-time of normal time and with their 3-3 draw secured only by Dudek’s incredible double save from Shevchenko in extra time.
This season has sparked such memories for Shevchenko again and it’s striking that we only stop talking about the war in Ukraine to discuss Milan’s unexpected progress to the semi-finals. Next month they play Internazionale in a Champions League derby which reminds Shevchenko of the 2003 semi-final. He scored the vital away goal against Inter which helped Milan reach the final.
Andriy Shevchenko scoring for Milan against Internazionale in their 2003 Champions League semi-final. Photograph: Phil Cole/Getty Images
“They are fantastic memories,” Shevchenko says with a smile, “and Milan have a big chance to repeat the story against Inter again.”
He is enough of a Milan supporter to believe that they could shock everyone by winning the Champions League – even though Manchester City or Real Madrid would await in the final. “I watched how Milan played those two quarter-final games against Napoli like a mature team,” he says. “I say mature because, when they had to suffer, Milan would close the gap, defend, work as a team, covering a lot of distance and fight. And then they could strike when the chances came. These games are so close but there is a maturity to the team. I think Milan could do it because they have good players and a very strong team spirit.”
Shevchenko is an astute and intelligent coach, who did excellent work in guiding Ukraine to the quarter-finals of the Covid-delayed Euro 2020, where they lost to England in Rome in the summer of 2021. When he took over as national coach they had just emerged from a miserable tournament at Euro 2016 after losing all three group games and failing to score. Shevchenko drew on everything he had learned from his managerial mentor Valeriy Lobanovskyi, who had helped Dynamo Kyiv become a force in Europe in the 70s and 80s.
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When Shevchenko played under Lobanovskyi at Dynamo he became intensely serious about football. “He gave me the understanding that there are no trifles in football,” Shevchenko said. “No detail of the work can be ignored. I listened to him with my mouth open, catching every word.”
Shevchenko’s knowledge deepened during his years in Italy when he was coached by Alberto Zaccheroni and then Carlo Ancelotti, who became his second mentor. The lessons he learned from Italian football shaped his work in revitalising Ukraine. It would have been fascinating to discover how Shevchenko might have done in club management but his brief stint at Genoa lasted just over two months, and nine league games, before he was sacked after a defeat by Milan in January 2022.
Five weeks later Vladimir Putin declared war on Ukraine and the first bombs rained down on Kyiv. Shevchenko’s determination to help raise awareness of the unjust conflict means that any return to coaching has been delayed. His immersion in the war effort is deep and so there is no time to analyse the current fiasco at Chelsea, where Shevchenko battled with injury and form during an unsuccessful spell from 2006 to 2009. We do not get a chance to discuss how Roman Abramovich, who was once close to Putin, had pursued Shevchenko relentlessly before he signed him from Milan.
We also don’t have time to reflect on his happier times at Dynamo, where he developed into the lethal striker who lit up European football. I would love to ask Shevchenko about the night in 1997 when, aged just 21, he scored a Champions League hat-trick in the first half for Dynamo against Barcelona at the Camp Nou. The war, instead, is too consuming for such memories.
“As soon as the war started,” Shevchenko says, “my mum and my sister were packed, with their small luggage, ready to go any time. My aunt also spent 10 days under the shelter, hiding from missiles in the first months of the war. I know families who didn’t even have time to pack or take their passports. They had to [flee] because danger was coming. We did this as a family when I was very young [Shevchenko was nine when his family had to leave their village near Chornobyl and move to Kyiv in 1986] but that was a nuclear disaster. This is a war and if you had asked me a few years ago if this could happen I would say: ‘No.’”
Has he lost friends in the war? “Yes,” Shevchenko says. “A few close friends. But I know people who have lost much more.”
Andriy Shevchenko with the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Photograph: Alamy
Amid grief and pain he and Oleksandr Zinchenko, Ukraine’s captain who has been a revelation for Arsenal this season, have set up their Football for Ukraine initiative which aims to raise funds for the war effort. “We already did a lot of different projects together,” he says of Zinchenko and himself. “Now we’re preparing something big with this project to raise support for Ukrainian people. We already did a project in [the war-torn city of] Irpin with UNITED24.”
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy set up UNITED24 to give people around the world an easy and direct way to support Ukraine’s military efforts, enhance medical aid and help finance the rebuilding of the country. “We raised funds to rebuild the football stadium in Irpin and I think the impact of sport is very important,” Shevchenko says as an ambassador for UNITED24. “It can bring something different to people, and help them escape the war for a little bit. Oleksandr has been incredible. I’m very proud of him because he’s young and he has a very young family, with a baby, but he has given so much support to Ukraine. He’s not only tried to find the funds but he speaks loud about Ukraine. He has stayed so strong.”
As his former national‑team manager, has Shevchenko helped Zinchenko adjust to the trauma of having to address the war again and again? “When we talk I try to tell him; ‘Don’t hold the emotion. Let it out. There’s nothing to hold. We have to show the truth. We are here to show the world exactly what Ukrainian people are feeling.’ It has been difficult for everyone but, every time we speak, I always remind him: ‘We have to be a lot stronger. We have to help our people in Ukraine because they need us. We have to bring attention to the war.’”
Does the endless grind, with Russian aggression continuing no matter how heroically the Ukrainian army pushes them back, leave Shevchenko feeling depressed? “I am much stronger now. I know we have to just carry on. At the beginning of the war, and for the first four months there was a lot of hard stuff for me. But I can’t complain because I know on the frontline the soldiers have to face so much and families in Ukraine have to evacuate dangerous areas which have been hit by missiles. We went through an incredible year, the winter was so difficult, and with the first big blackout in Ukraine I was there, in Kyiv.
“But we defend our country and this gives us such power. We know the entire democratic world is behind us. But this is a good moment for me to remind everyone that the war keeps going.
“Please help share the Maryna story. These are our people, our children and our soldiers, who are losing their lives or being badly injured. It’s important the entire world keeps helping us. We still have a strong spirit – and that spirit will help us to defend Ukraine and win in the end.”
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( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )
Wipro, Indian multinational corporation that specializes in information technology, consulting, and business process services, is set to announce its Q4 results today along with a proposed share buyback program.
With Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and Infosys both missing street estimates in their Q4 results, investors are cautious about Wipro’s performance. The big question on everyone’s mind is whether the proposed buyback program will prevent a further drop in Wipro’s share price, which has declined by over 27 percent in the past year.
Outcome of the Wipro Board Meeting
Wipro’s two-day board meeting began yesterday, during which they were expected to consider a proposal for a share buyback program. The outcome of the board meeting will be announced today along with the Q4 results.
In a statement to the stock exchanges, the company earlier said, “The outcome of the Board meeting will be communicated to the stock exchanges soon after the conclusion of the Board meeting on April 27, 2023.”
Wipro stocks dip by 27 percent in one year
Wipro’s share price has been on a downward trend for the past year, with the stocks dipping by over 27 percent. In the current year alone, the stocks have dropped by over four percent.
This decline is a cause for concern for investors, and the announcement of the buyback program is being seen as a potential solution to stabilize the share price.
Wipro’s past performance and share buyback program history
Wipro has a history of using share buyback programs. In 2021, the company bought back shares worth Rs 9500 crore at an offer price of Rs 400 per share. In 2019, it bought back shares worth Rs 10500 crore at an offer price of Rs 325 per share.
When it comes to declaration of the earnings, the reactions of the investors have been mixed in the past. Wipro’s shares traded in the red on the next day of the earnings declaration in six out of 13 quarters since 2020.
Delhi: “It was like we were on a deathbed,” recalled a relieved Sukhvinder Singh from Haryana as he arrived at the Delhi airport from Saudi Arabia on Wednesday night after being evacuated from strife-torn Sudan.
In his mid-40s, the engineer was among the first batch of 360 Indian nationals who returned home under India’s ‘Operation Kaveri’ evacuation mission.
Singh, a native of Faridabad in Haryana, recalled his ordeal in Sudan and said he was “still very scared”.
VIDEO | First batch of Indians evacuated from Sudan arrive at Delhi Airport. At least 534 Indian nationals have been evacuated from the strife-torn African nation so far. pic.twitter.com/R0AqCQZTD1
“We were living in one area, confined to one room. It was like we were on a deathbed,” he told PTI before making his way home.
India has evacuated at least 670 Indian nationals from Sudan and is looking to rescue more of its citizens from the strife-torn African nation before the end of a tenuous ceasefire between the regular army and a paramilitary force.
Chhotu, a factory worker who hails from Kushinagar in Uttar Pradesh, was in a state of disbelief and exclaimed, “‘Marke wapas aa gaya (have returned after almost dying)’.”
“Now, I will never return to Sudan. I will do anything in this country but won’t go back,” he told PTI shortly after landing at the Indira Gandhi International Airport’s Terminal 3.
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar took to Twitter to share images of the evacuees after their arrival at the Delhi airport.
“India welcomes back its own. Operation Kaveri brings 360 Indian nationals to the homeland as first flight reaches New Delhi,” he tweeted.
At the airport’s Terminal 3, as people deboarded the aircraft of Saudia — a Saudi Arabian airline — and slowly streamed on to the arrivals lounge area, smiles could be seen on the faces of many who went through tense moments over the past few days.
Many waved emphatically, displaying a visible sign of relief, while others shook hands on the skybridge as they were welcomed on their return.
Several were seen carrying their luggage, accompanied by children. They also obliged a few photographers with pictures upon their safe return.
Tasmer Singh (60), an evacuee who hails from Hoshiarpur in Punjab, described his experience during the ongoing strife as horrifying.
“We were like a dead body, roaming in a small house without power, water. We never imagined that we will face this kind of a situation in our lives but thank God, we are alive,” he said.
Sudan has been witnessing deadly fighting between the country’s army and a paramilitary group for the last 12 days that has reportedly left around 400 people dead.
India stepped up its efforts to evacuate the Indians from Sudan after a 72-hour truce was agreed between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces following intense negotiations.
The batch of Indian nationals evacuated from Sudan who landed in Delhi heaved a sigh of relief after returning to their homeland.
Among the evacuees who reached Delhi airport in the Saudia flight, 19 are from Kerala, state government officials said.
Under ‘Operation Kaveri’, India is taking the evacuees to the Saudi Arabian city of Jeddah from where they are returning home.
India has set up a transit facility in Jeddah and Union Minister of State for External Affairs V Muraleedharan is overseeing the evacuation mission from the Saudi Arabian city.
Sukhwinder Singh, the engineer, also narrated how difficult it was to travel during the strife in Sudan.
“We contacted the Indian embassy and buses for around 200 people were arranged. A road trip was very risky. Only God knows how we reached Port Sudan,” he said.
He said the warring groups can shoot anybody “depending on their mood”.
“It depends on the mood of the individual. If we say we are Indians, they let us go,” the Faridabad native said.
Meanwhile, IndiGo said it has offered services for charter flights to Jeddah under ‘Operation Kaveri’.
“We are still awaiting details from the ministry to launch these flights, nothing has been confirmed as of yet,” the airline said in a statement.
The Indian Air Force’s transport aircraft brought to Jeddah 392 Indians from Port Sudan on Wednesday, a day after an Indian Navy ship rescued 278 citizens from that country.
The total number of Indians evacuated so far from Sudan stands at 670, according to official data.
The first batch of 278 Indians was evacuated from Port Sudan by the Indian Navy’s frontline ship INS Sumedha on Tuesday.
Several states have opened help desks and announced assistance such as free travel and lodging for Indians evacuated from Sudan once they arrive in the country.
The Kerala government said it would make necessary arrangements to bring Malayalis evacuated from Sudan by the Centre to the state.
The Uttar Pradesh government on Wednesday opened a help desk at the resident commissioner’s office in Delhi for people from the state trapped in Sudan, a senior official said in Lucknow.
The Rajasthan government has decided to bear the transportation expense of all migrants from the state after they land in Delhi.
The government will also arrange for boarding and lodging for the returnees, officials said.
SRINAGAR: A student from National Institute of Technology (NIT) Srinagar has earned 1.23 lakh profit from his investment in the share market during the past one week and has decided to donate the entire amount among marginalized sections of society.
Tabrez Alam, 8th-semester student from the Department of Information Technology is all set to donate his profit of investments among marginalized sections of society including students.
In his message, Director NIT Srinagar Prof Rakesh Sehgal appreciated Tabrez Alam for the noble initiative. Donations can provide essential support to individuals and communities who are struggling with poverty, illness, or other challenges, he said.
“By donating, individuals can inspire others to give and contribute to creating a culture of generosity and compassion,” Prof. Sehgal said, adding that NIT Srinagar students should become a ray of hope for the society.
Institute’s Registrar, Prof. Syed Kaiser Bukhari said donation is a powerful tool for creating positive change in the world and helping those in need. By giving to others, we can make a difference in their lives and contribute to building a better future for all, he said.
Prof. Bukhari said helping society at the time of need is essential for building a strong and resilient community. Addressing systemic issues that contribute to social and economic inequality requires sustained limitless efforts. Such things are the need of the hour, he said.
Hailing from Dhaka Champaran district of Bihar, Tabrez stated that he had invested around 5 lakh in the share market. Now has decided to share his entire profit among the marginalized sections of society including poor students, he said.
“I want to help people who are suffering in our society. Although it is a small contribution, I am trying my best to do my part,” he said.