Tag: Stay

  • SC refuses to stay EC order recognising Shinde faction as real Shiv Sena

    SC refuses to stay EC order recognising Shinde faction as real Shiv Sena

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    New Delhi: The Supreme Court Wednesday refused to stay the Election Commission order recognising the Eknath Shinde-led bloc as the real Shiv Sena and issued a notice to the group headed by the Maharashtra chief minister on the plea of the rival Uddhav Thackeray camp challenging the poll panel’s decision.

    A bench headed by Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud took note of the submissions of senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for Thackeray, and sought response of the faction led by Maharashtra Chief Minister Shinde.

    The counsel for the Shinde faction told the bench, also comprising Justices P S Narasimha and J B Pardiwala, that it will not issue any whip or initiate process to disqualify the lawmakers of the Thackeray faction in the meantime.

    “All right, issue notice. The counter affidavit will be filed within two weeks,” the bench said.

    While issuing notice, the bench, however, refused to stay the decision of the poll panel acknowledging the Shinde faction as the real Shiv Sena, saying it cannot be done without hearing the other side.

    The top court had on Tuesday agreed to hear the plea of the Thackeray camp against the Election Commission’s decision.

    Besides recognising the Shinde-led bloc as the real Shiv Sena, the poll panel had also ordered allotment of the party’s original ‘bow and arrow’ poll symbol to it.

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    #refuses #stay #order #recognising #Shinde #faction #real #Shiv #Sena

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The best coaches are thieves, stealing ideas from others to stay at the top of their game | Karen Carney

    The best coaches are thieves, stealing ideas from others to stay at the top of their game | Karen Carney

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    The ball was sent long, launched off the right boot in the hope of getting his team up the other end to put pressure on the opposition defenders. Possession was lost, though, and the visitors took control, quickly regained the territory and nearly scored on the counter. The fan next to me bemoaned this waste of an attack from the hosts, claiming short passes at speed are a better way of playing than that “lazy” style.

    All this took place at Twickenham, where it was fascinating to analyse the differences and similarities between rugby union and football. I spent last Sunday at England’s victory over Italy in the Six Nations, watching the preferences for slower buildup or a more direct approach. It was supposed to be a day off, something completely different from my day-to-day roles, but I was fascinated by what the sports can take from one another, and seeing the tactical theories on show and how they could influence other sports.

    Football is all-consuming in my life because of my punditry in the men’s and women’s games, leading the government review into women’s football and working on a project, The Second Half, to help female footballers transition into a career outside the sport. I have, however, recognised the need to look externally to find the best ways to progress and innovate.

    If an organisation stands still, it will go backwards. The best are always looking to take that next step to keep them ahead of rivals. Pep Guardiola and Jürgen Klopp are innovators on the pitch, coming up with new tactics, whereas Brentford and Brighton innovate in recruitment. They all do what is required to progress.

    Sir Alex Ferguson was another who never rested on his laurels. For example, he brought in a vision specialist, the late Prof Gail Stephenson, to test the players’ eyes. He was always looking for a high-performance advantage to set Manchester United apart.

    I visited the National Cycling Centre at the Manchester Velodrome a few years ago to see how they operate when I was doing my psychology master’s and learned from what they do. The sport has been heavily influenced by Sir Dave Brailsford, who pioneered the idea of marginal gains and made others think differently about coaching. It made its way into my mindset. If you get a 1% advantage in seven areas that would give a 7% advantage over rivals. Many have looked at this concept and analysts have investigated the minutiae that can make a huge difference in elite sport. It is not just individual ideas that change sports but concepts.

    Former England rugby union coach Eddie Jones.
    The former England rugby union coach Eddie Jones has made an impression on Everton manager Sean Dyche. Photograph: Dave Shopland/Shutterstock

    Often out-of-work football coaches will visit other clubs to see how their contemporaries operate. We also see plenty of examples of crossover. The former England rugby union coach Eddie Jones scrutinised proceedings at football training grounds, and Eddie Howe went to watch boxing weigh-ins to find out how fighters prepare mentally. Sean Dyche said last week he would invite Jones to Everton’s training centre. “If you are going to ask for feedback – get people in who will give you feedback,” Dyche said. “It’s not just football people; it’s business people, who I will ask to pop in.”

    Getting that range of perspectives can be informative and it is a two-way street. The best coaches are thieves, picking up others’ ideas and implementing them within their own structure.

    Chelsea recently hired the All Blacks leadership manager and mental skills coach, Gilbert Enoka, on a consultancy basis. The New Zealand rugby team have won two World Cups during his time on the staff. The difference between the best and the rest at the highest level is mentality. Everyone there can run, jump, twist and turn. I am always interested when a player says in a post-match interview: “I am confident at the moment.” One has to look at what that means. In a gym you can measure fitness by lifting weights, for example, because you can see the progression but in terms of psychological gains it is hard to measure.

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    Tennis is a fascinating example because it is – often – played as an individual and that person has to motivate themselves with no one on the court to get them going or encourage them. Everything that person needs to win is within their armoury and they have to rely on themselves to complete the business. Footballers can learn from that.

    All sportspeople need to recover and the science across the different professions is aligning. Ice baths, recovery drinks and meditation have become the norm in many sports because of the benefits those are found to have.

    There is also plenty to learn from other sports in terms of business and how they attract and engage with fans. At Twickenham I looked at the fan experience and how that differs in sports on match day. The business of attracting supporters is imperative, especially in a market where fans have plenty of choice of where to spend their money.

    Staying at the top is the hardest part of professional football. Getting a team physically and mentally prepared for every fixture is a coach’s aim. To do that they need the best staff, facilities and equipment but it helps if they also know how to steal the odd idea and make it their own – because if they do not, others will.

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    #coaches #thieves #stealing #ideas #stay #top #game #Karen #Carney
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Advocate Shahid Azmi killing case: Bombay HC lifts stay on trial

    Advocate Shahid Azmi killing case: Bombay HC lifts stay on trial

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    Mumbai: The Bombay High Court has vacated the stay on trial in the 2010 killing of criminal lawyer Shahid Azmi and rejected a plea filed by an accused seeking a change of the trial court on the grounds of “bias”.

    Azmi was shot dead in his office in suburban Kurla on February 11, 2010.

    At the time of his death, Azmi represented many accused in the 7/11 train blasts cases, Malegaon 2006 bomb blasts cases, the Aurangabad arms haul case, and the Ghatkopar blasts case. Hansal Mehta’s 2013 film Shahid’ starring Rajkummar Rao is based on the life and work of Azmi.

    The prosecution case is that Azmi was killed at the behest of gangster Chhota Rajan.

    The High Court stayed the trial in September 2022 after an accused Hasmukh Solanki moved an application to transfer the case to another sessions judge.

    A single bench of Justice P D Naik on February 7 vacated the stay order and rejected Solanki’s plea seeking transfer of the case from the sessions judge in Mumbai, currently conducting the trial, to another sessions judge. Solanki had alleged bias by the present judge.

    Justice Naik in the order said he did not find sufficient material on record to conclude that the trial court was biased against Solanki.

    “The material on record is not sufficient to draw the conclusion that the trial court is biased against Solanki and that he would not get a fair trial before the said court. No case is made out for transfer of trial,” HC said.

    Azmi had been in Tihar jail for 7 years after being charged under the now-repealed Terrorist and Disruptive Activities Prevention Act (TADA) for his alleged involvement to kill politicians.

    He was later acquitted by the Supreme Court. Meanwhile, he obtained an LLB degree while in prison.

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    #Advocate #Shahid #Azmi #killing #case #Bombay #lifts #stay #trial

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • SC imposes interim stay on demolition order passed by Calcutta HC

    SC imposes interim stay on demolition order passed by Calcutta HC

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    New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Saturday imposed an interim stay on a February 3 order of the Calcutta High Court order directing the demolition of a building.

    In a special hearing, a bench of justices V Ramasubramanian and Hrishikesh Roy issued a notice in the matter and sought a response from the parties.

    Senior advocate Siddhartha Dave, appearing for petitioners, contended that the impugned order directing demolition of the building has been passed in a contempt case which is pending, and the petitioners are yet to be found guilty.

    “It is also contended that in the event of the court carrying out the demolition now and eventually finding the petitioners not guilty of contempt, there must be one more restitution which is not permissible in law.

    “In view of the above, issue notice returnable on March 14, 2023. There will be an interim suspension of the impugned order till the next date of hearing,” the bench said.

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    #imposes #interim #stay #demolition #order #passed #Calcutta

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Gautam Adani to take $10B loan to stay in World’s richest people list

    Gautam Adani to take $10B loan to stay in World’s richest people list

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    Adani Group chairman Gautam Adani, who stood at the 10th spot on the Forbes Real-time billionaire list for 2023 has now slipped out of the world’s top ten richest persons. Soon after Hindenburg Research report, Adani group witnessed massive decline in their share prices and Gautam Adani too lost over $10 B of net worth. Now there are no Indians in the list of world’s top ten richest people.

     

    To ensure that the world’s top ten richest list has at least an Indian, the Adani Group has decided to take $10B loan from the government. The government is likely to approve the loan. The governments decision to approve the loan was taken after Adani Group covered itself in Nationalism when Hindenburg research accused Adani group of being engaged in a brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme over the course of decades.

     

    Sources suggest that Adani group is also likely to start a fund raise activity where every citizen can donate to make an Indian the world’s richest man. “During the global recession, India is a bright spot, the world is looking at us with a hope and we must not disappoint the world with not having any Indian in the world’s richest people list” said an economic expert.

     

     

     

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    #Gautam #Adani #10B #loan #stay #Worlds #richest #people #list

    [ Disclaimer: With inputs from The Fauxy, an entertainment portal. The content is purely for entertainment purpose and readers are advised not to confuse the articles as genuine and true, these Articles are Fictitious meant only for entertainment purposes. ]

  • Bolsonaro wants to extend his stay in Florida

    Bolsonaro wants to extend his stay in Florida

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    The Financial Times reports that Bolsonaro is on an A-1 diplomatic visa, which is reserved for diplomats and heads of state.

    Bolsonaro left Brazil for Florida in late December after he lost reelection to leftist rival Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and has been staying at a home near Disney World in Orlando. Fans and supporters have frequently waited outside his Orlando-area residence to catch a glimpse or to greet him with food and words of praise. He was also spotted wandering around a local grocery store and eating at a KFC, sparking online jokes on Twitter.

    But in early January, thousands of Bolsonaro supporters stormed government buildings in Brazil to protest the country’s October election results. The scene was eerily similar to the Jan. 6 riots at the U.S. Capitol.

    In the aftermath of the Brazilian protests, lawmakers in the U.S. called for Bolsonaro’s ouster from America.

    Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D.-N.Y.) and Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) both called on the Biden administration to kick Bolsonaro out of the country while Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) told POLITICO the U.S. should comply with any valid extradition request to return the former Brazilian president.

    In a letter dated Jan. 12 to President Joe Biden, almost 50 U.S. House members called on the president to examine whether Bolsonaro can legitimately stay in the country. The lawmakers also asked Biden to prevent Bolsonaro from taking refuge here.

    “His peddling of disinformation, his failure to call on supporters to accept the results of the election, and his active calls to mobilize against democratic institutions incited thousands of protestors to storm government buildings and to participate in the violent acts on January 8 against Brazil’s pillars of democracy,” the letter stated.

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    #Bolsonaro #extend #stay #Florida
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Hyderabad: TSRTC bus pass counters to stay shut on Republic Day

    Hyderabad: TSRTC bus pass counters to stay shut on Republic Day

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    Hyderabad: The TSRTC bus pass counters operating in the Greater Hyderabad zone will stay closed in view of Republic Day celebrations on Thursday.

    The counters will however resume functioning the next day.

    The executive director of TSRTC has directed the bus pass holders to reach out to the counters on Friday from 6:30 am to 8: 30 pm for their queries.

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    #Hyderabad #TSRTC #bus #pass #counters #stay #shut #Republic #Day

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Jobless Indian IT professionals scramble for options to stay in US

    Jobless Indian IT professionals scramble for options to stay in US

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    Washington: Thousands of Indian IT professionals in the US, who have lost their jobs due to the series of recent layoffs at companies like Google, Microsoft and Amazon, are now struggling to find new employment within the stipulated period under their work visas following the termination of their employment to stay in the country.

    According to The Washington Post, nearly 200,000 IT workers have been laid off since November last year, including some record numbers in companies like Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Amazon.

    As per some industry insiders, between 30 to 40 per cent of them are Indian IT professionals, a significant number of whom are on H-1B and L1 visas.

    The H-1B visa is a non-immigrant visa that allows US companies to employ foreign workers in speciality occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise. Technology companies depend on it to hire tens of thousands of employees each year from countries like India and China.

    L-1A and L-1B visas are available for temporary intracompany transferees who work in managerial positions or have specialised knowledge.

    A significantly large number of Indian IT professionals, who are on non-immigrant work visas like H-1B are L1, are now scrambling for options to stay in the US to find a new job in the stipulated few months time that they get under these foreign work visas after losing their jobs and change their visa status as well.

    Amazon staffer Gita (name changed) arrived in the US only three months ago. This week she was told that March 20 is her last working day.

    The situation is getting worse for those on H-1B visas as they have to find a new job within 60 days or else, they would be left with no other option but to head back to India.

    Under current circumstances, when all IT companies are on a firing spree, getting a job within that short period, they feel is next to impossible.

    Sita (name changed), another IT professional on an H-1B visa, got laid off from Microsoft on January 18.

    She is a single mother. Her son is in High School Junior year, preparing for getting into college.

    “This situation is really hard on us,” she said.

    “It is unfortunate that thousands of tech employees are facing layoffs, particularly those on H-1B visas who are facing additional challenges as they must find a new job and transfer their visa within 60 days of termination or risk leaving the country,” Silicon Valley-based entrepreneur and community leader Ajay Jain Bhutoria said.

    “This can have devastating consequences for families, including the sale of properties and disruptions to children’s education. It would be beneficial for tech companies to show special consideration for H-1B workers and extend their termination date by a few months, as the job market and recruitment process can be challenging,” he said.

    Global Indian Technology Professionals Association (GITPRO) and Foundation for India and Indian Diaspora Studies (FIIDS) on Sunday launched a community-wide effort to try and help these IT professionals by connecting job seekers to job referrers and informers. FIIDS will work on efforts to influence policymakers and decision-makers of US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).

    “With massive layoffs in the tech industry, January 2023 has been brutal for tech professionals. Many talented folks lost their jobs. As the tech industry is dominated by Indian immigrants, they are the highest to get impacted,” Khande Rao Kand said.

    The laid-off H-1B holders need to find an H-1B sponsoring job in 60 days or leave within 10 days after becoming out of status.

    “This has a huge disruption on the family lives and children’s education etc on this tax-paying and contributing legal immigrant,” Khande Rao Kand from FIIDS said.
    Bhutoria said it would be beneficial for the immigration process to be redesigned to better support H-1B workers and retain highly skilled talent in the US.

    In deep distress, the fired Indian IT workers have formed various WhatsApp groups to find ways to have a solution to the terrible situation they are in.

    In one of the WhatsApp groups, there are more than 800 jobless Indian IT workers who are circulating among themselves vacancies appearing in the country.

    In another group, they have been discussing various visa options, with some immigration attorneys who have volunteered to offer their consultancy services during this time.

    “These circumstances have such a devastating effect on us immigrants and are nerve-wracking. We are kinda lost,” said Rakesh (name changed) was laid off from Microsoft on Thursday. He is in the US on an H-1B visa.

    Adding to the miseries of Indian IT professionals is the latest decision of Google that they are pausing their Green Card processing. This is primarily because, at a time when they have fired thousands of employees, they cannot be seen arguing before the USCIS that they need a foreign IT professional as a permanent resident. Other companies are expected to follow the same.

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    #Jobless #Indian #professionals #scramble #options #stay

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Some dishes stay with you forever. Should I look for them again? | Rachel Cooke

    Some dishes stay with you forever. Should I look for them again? | Rachel Cooke

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    At this time of year, it’s tempting to devote a space like this to the making and breaking of kitchen resolutions (I refuse to say the word diet). But I’m going to be awkward, and save all that for next month. January is bad enough without talk of waistlines. What about some happy news instead, like the fact that the beloved and supremely talented chef Henry Harris quietly opened his new restaurant, Bouchon Racine, shortly before Christmas?

    Look, I can’t be the only person in the world who will forever carry with me the memory of at least half a dozen dishes all of which were so unimpeachably delicious at the time – a combination of circumstances as well as ingredients – they will surely remain unmatched for the rest of my days. Just as I will never eat a crab sandwich as good as the one I devoured at a pub in Seahouses in Northumberland after a long walk in filthy weather, no grilled chicken with rice and tomatoes will ever live up to those that were served to a dripping wet me (I’d been swimming) on an old boat in the middle of a lake in Turkey a whole lifetime ago. I eat knafeh, oozing sugar syrup and soft white cheese, whenever I see it. But I’ve never tasted any so delicious as the slice I hungrily forked up beneath the fluorescent strip lights of a Ramallah sweet shop in 2005, my reward for days of hard work.

    But it is human nature to want to try and replicate perfection, though we know full well this will lead inevitably only to disappointment. When I heard that Harris had opened a dining room above a pub in Clerkenwell, all I could think about was the saffron and garlic mousse with mussels he used to serve at the original Racine in Knightsbridge. Would it be on the menu? And if it was, would it still be as fantastic? I went to Racine only rarely – it was the wrong side of town for me, in more ways than one – but on every occasion, it was this mousse that I ate, urged on by the kind friend who used to take me, who loved it as much as I did. Racine closed its doors eight years ago, a victim of rising rents, but I’ve never forgotten the smoothness and subtlety of that mousse, the effortlessness involved in its rapid disappearance seemingly having no effect whatsoever on one’s ability to eat it any less quickly.

    It was, then, with some trepidation that I booked a table at Bouchon Racine in the peaceful days between Christmas and new year, and perhaps I was secretly relieved when the blackboard on which the menu is written included no mention of this famous mousse. I ate an immaculate salad (escarole with tarragon and shavings of bright orange mimolette), followed by rabbit in mustard sauce and creme caramel, and all was right in the world. But still, I just couldn’t help myself. As our waiter generously splashed some lethal vieille prune into two glasses – I really shouldn’t have drunk it, but I did, so shoot me – I asked if a certain starter might be making a popular comeback in due course.

    I’m not sure that I expected an answer; when he disappeared, I anticipated the bill and a muttered “maybe”. But as things turned out, I did get one – an answer, I mean – from Harris himself, who promptly appeared at our table. From what I can remember (I was slightly tipsy), he said he was still working out which of his old favourites he really had to put on the menu – the rabbit is a keeper, apparently – but that, yes, the mousse probably would reappear at some point. And then he made a self-deprecating joke about how his particular skill is to make dishes that are good for those with no teeth (possibly he knew I’d had the creme caramel).

    For my part, I was a bit embarrassed. I didn’t want him to think that my dinner had been lacking in any way, because it was heavenly and completely un-improvable. But I also had a sudden and rising sense of hope, for all that I was so full I could hardly move. The holy grail! Wobbly and palest yellow, it was again in sight. When I got home, the first thing I did was to book another table.

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    #dishes #stay #Rachel #Cooke
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • SC Asks J&K To Not Demolish Houses In Roshni Land; Refuses To Stay Govt Order For Removal Of Encroachments

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    SRINAGAR: On Friday, the Supreme Court of India refused to stay a circular issued by Jammu & Kashmir government directing deputy commissioners to remove encroachments on State Land including Roshni Land and Kachharie land by January 31, 2023, reported LiveLaw.in.

    A bench of Justices MR Shah and CT Ravikumar, though expressed its disclination in not passing an order today, it orally asked the Union Territory to not demolish any houses.

    “We are not passing any order today. You instruct them orally not to demolish any houses. But we will not grant a general stay…. others should not get benefit,” the bench orally told the counsel of J&K, according to report published in Livelaw.in.

    During the hearing, the advocate for the petitioner argued that many tribals are residing on the land and took the Court through the reliefs prayed for.

    “If stay is granted then it will benefit land grabbers also?”, Justice Shah asked.

    The counsel appearing for the Union Territory clarified that the circular is mainly focused on the Roshni land. He also questioned the locus of the applicants.

    “The Application was served on me yesterday. It does not even mention that the applicants live there”, he pointed out while adding that the said land only had shops and such establishments.

    The Court then adjourned the matter. The matter was mentioned before the Chief Justice DY Chandrachud, earlier this week.

    The Jammu and Kashmir government, on January 9, directed the removal of all encroachments on State Land, including Roshni Land and Kachharie land, by January 31, 2023. The order was passed while several review petitions challenging Roshni Act Judgment remain pending before the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh.

    In 2020, the Jammu and Kashmir High Court held that the Jammu and Kashmir State Land (Vesting of Ownership to the Occupants) Act 2001, [popularly known as Roshni Act] is completely unconstitutional.

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    #Asks #Demolish #Houses #Roshni #Land #Refuses #Stay #Govt #Order #Removal #Encroachments

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )