Tag: violations

  • No FEMA violations found so far after ED searches at BYJU’S

    No FEMA violations found so far after ED searches at BYJU’S

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    New Delhi: The initial investigation after the recent searches at BYJU’S have so far found no Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) violations by the edtech firm, according to sources.

    Sources indicated that the recent searches conducted on the premises of BYJU’S in Bengaluru by Enforcement Directorate (ED) and the material collected has yet to establish any FEMA violations.

    The investigations are still at an early stage and according to sources, BYJU’S had cooperated and provided ED with all the necessary documents.

    MS Education Academy

    When contacted, a top ED official told IANS that the BYJU’S investigation is ongoing and “we cannot comment on the ongoing investigation”.

    The ED had earlier carried out searches at three premises linked to BYJU’S in Bengaluru, in connection with alleged foreign exchange violations.

    ED in a tweet had said that they collected various incriminating documents and digital data during its searches.

    FEMA searches also revealed that the company has received foreign direct investment to the tune of Rs 28,000 crore (approximately) during the period from 2011 to 2023.

    Further, the company has also remitted about Rs 9,754 crore to various foreign jurisdictions during the same period in the name of overseas direct investment.

    A BYJU’S spokesperson had said that the ED visit “was related to a routine inquiry under FEMA and there has been no violations under FEMA by BYJU’S.

    “We have been completely transparent with the authorities and have provided them with all the information they have requested. We have nothing but the utmost confidence in the integrity of our operations, and we are committed to upholding the highest standards of compliance and ethics,” the company spokesperson had said.

    The edtech firm said that it will continue to work closely with the authorities to ensure that they have all the information they need.

    “We are confident that this matter will be resolved in a timely and satisfactory manner. We want to emphasise that it is business as usual at BYJU’S,” said the company.

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    #FEMA #violations #searches #BYJUS

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • JK Demotes Officer After Inquiry Establishes Violations

    JK Demotes Officer After Inquiry Establishes Violations

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    SRINAGAR: The Jammu & Kashmir government has demoted a retired officer from the date he was placed as in-charge Deputy Superintendent of Police (DySP) after an inquiry established that there were building plan and master plan violations during his stint with the Lakes & Waterways Development Authority, which has been renamed as the Lake Conservation and Management Authority (LCMA).

    In an order, the J&K Home department has imposed a penalty of “reduction to a lower post” on Shah Sikander, the in-charge DySP (now retired).

    The Home department’s order states that Shah Sikander, the in-charge DySP, is demoted to the post of inspector with effect from 20.07.2012, the date he was placed as in-charge DySP.

    Sikander, the then enforcement officer of Lake and Waterways Development Authority (LAWDA), was arrested by the State Vigilance Organisation on March 14, 2017, in a case registered against him in 2015 for violations in peripheral areas of Dal Lake.

    According to the order, Sikander was served with a charge sheet on June 21, 2017, for not submitting a written statement of defence within a period of 21 days.

    He submitted his statement on September 25, 2017, and refuted all the charges.

    As per the order, the response submitted by the officer was found unsatisfactory, and accordingly, it was decided that the charges were required to be thoroughly investigated.

    On January 01, 2018, the government appointed an inquiry officer to probe the charges against him.

    In the report, the inquiry officer established that there was a violation of building permission norms and instances of illegal construction around the Dal Lake during his posting with LAWDA (now LCMA).

    “The competent authority decided to impose the penalty of ‘reduction in rank’ for violating J&K Government Employees (Conduct) Rules, 1971,” reads the order. (KNO)

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    #Demotes #Officer #Inquiry #Establishes #Violations

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Turkey earthquakes put spotlight on building code violations

    Turkey earthquakes put spotlight on building code violations

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    New Delhi: Over a month after three devastating earthquakes struck Turkey, experts are trying to piece together information on the compliance level of buildings in the geologically fragile region.

    A recent report outlining preliminary findings of damage assessment of the earthquakes shows violations of the building code stipulations in the past two decades contributed to a large number of lives lost and extensive damage to infrastructure.

    Over 48,000 people have died so far in the February 6 quakes and nearly 1.2 lakh people have been injured.

    The report by a team of scientists from Middle East Technical University (METU), Ankara, and colleagues also observed that in Gaziantep, Hatay, Kahramanmaras, and Adiyaman provinces, the buildings were subjected to seismic shocks larger than what the Turkish Earthquake Code (2018) design levels provided for.

    The experts noted that regardless of the unprecedented nature of the earthquakes, buildings should have endured and not suffered collapses the way they did.

    The ‘Preliminary Reconnaissance Report’ by the international team said that buildings designed and constructed post 2002 could be presumed to perform better during the quakes than the older buildings.

    However, the report shows that more than 1,000 buildings constructed after 2000 were heavily damaged or collapsed, violating the performance objective given in the code which assesses the seismic risk of a building with respect to its geographical location.

    This, the report said, appeared to be an important observation demanding further investigations on the design and construction quality of those buildings.

    “Inadequacies could also develop due to the presence of “soft stories,” which are entrances or basements not having continuity of its walls with those of the upper storeys,” explained Bora Sezer, a structural earthquake engineer based in Istanbul, Turkey.

    “The structures were poorly built. Normally, checks should be done during the construction of the structures,” added Seda Torisu, a Turkish-origin geotechnical engineer, currently working in Japan.

    “If there was no problem with the design of the structure, then problems happened during the application [or construction] of the design on site,” Torisu, a survivor of the 1999 Izmit earthquake, told PTI in an email.

    The team assessed the performance of all kinds of infrastructure such as residential structures, bridges, tunnels, coastal structures and historic structures.

    They found that inadequate foundations, as a matter of fact, were also the reason for “pancake” collapses of multiple buildings.

    Pancake collapse refers to a type of structural collapse which occurs from the top down as upper floors settle into lower floors of a building.

    Similar findings were outlined in the report as well, which divided the building damage inventory in the region into two, based on their construction periods — before and after 2002.

    This is because “a significant change is believed to have occurred in Turkiye between 1998 and 2001,” the report said.

    A modern earthquake code was put into effect on September 2, 1998. Two destructive quakes occurred on August 17, and November 12, 1999, in Kocaeli and Duzce, raising awareness for seismic resistance.

    A modern reinforced concrete design guideline (TS-500) came into force on October 12, 2000, making use of ready mix concrete and ductile low carbon content steel as reinforcement. A Building Inspection Law was enacted on July 13, 2001.

    “When we compare the pre-1998 earthquake regulation with today’s regulations and construction methods, there are serious changes made in terms of regulation acceptances, material quality and application details in construction methods,” explained Sezer, who is working with professors who revised The Turkiye Earthquake Code 2007 and 2018.

    “For these reasons, we expect more damage to structures built before 2000,” Sezer told PTI in an email.

    Examples of “serious changes” which were strictly unacceptable in the revised regulations includes reinforcement bars used for construction not being ribbed, insufficient stirrup tightening — provided to laterally confine steel reinforcement — insufficient concrete quality, and low quality of materials used.

    “Damage to old structures has been enormous. However, we have also seen in these earthquakes that many new buildings built after 2000, which were not well engineered or not well-inspected or whose soil-structure relationship remained unestablished, were damaged or demolished beyond expectations,” said Sezer.

    A strong example which demonstrates this point is that of Erzin in Turkey’s Hatay province, where there were no structural collapses or casualties.

    “The local government did not allow the construction of structures in Erzin, which had not been well-engineered or whose ground-structure interaction was not resolved,” Sezer said.

    “They also carried out strict controls on the construction processes of all buildings. In addition, the buildings in Erzin are low-rise and designed and built in accordance with the earthquake code and regulations,” he added.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Human Rights |  Child labor violations increased drastically in the United States

    Human Rights | Child labor violations increased drastically in the United States

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    Since 2018, according to the US Department of Labor, the number of violations has increased by almost 70 percent.

    Stateside the authorities have announced new measures aimed at eradicating child labour. This is reported by the Reuters news agency.

    The administration announced the new measures after the number of child labor violations skyrocketed. In addition, numerous media outlets, including Reuters, have reported on the use of children in several dangerous fields.

    Since 2018, the number of child labor violations has increased by nearly 70 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. In the last fiscal year alone, a total of 865 companies were deemed to have violated child labor laws.

    of the United States according to the authorities, children have been used as labor in, for example, the car and food industries. For example, children have allegedly made the popular Lucky Charms cereal and Cheetos chips. It worked out The New York Times – in the investigation of the newspaper, where the journalists revealed the use of child labor in the Hearthside Food Solutions company that manufactures the food in question.

    The US Department of Labor confirmed to Reuters that it has opened an investigation into the company’s actions. The company announced that it was cooperating with the authorities and said that it was “horrified” by the findings of the newspaper’s report.

    One of the reasons for the increase in the use of child labor is the arrival of underage children traveling alone to the United States. These children are easy prey for, for example, recruiters of large factories, through whom the children end up working in illegal or very heavy jobs.

    Current federal law prohibits children under the age of 16 from working in most factory settings. In addition, people under the age of 18 are not allowed to work in the most dangerous jobs.

    The US administration has, among other things, established a new task force to investigate violations. The working group works as a collaboration between different ministries.

    In addition, the administration wants to increase the amount of compensation from the current $15,138 per child. According to officials, the amount is not a sufficient deterrent for companies.

    #Human #Rights #Child #labor #violations #increased #drastically #United #States

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    #Human #Rights #Child #labor #violations #increased #drastically #United #States
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • Tourism Department Registers 251 Complaints Of Cheating, Other TT Act Violations During 2022

    Tourism Department Registers 251 Complaints Of Cheating, Other TT Act Violations During 2022

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    SRINAGAR: The Department of Tourism has registered 251 complaints of various nature from tourists and visitors in respect of violations of J&K Tourist Trade Act-1978/2012 by respective service providers even as 247 of these were settled and fine to the tune of Rs. 21.95 lakh was recovered from the erring service providers.

    The Department, during this one year, also ensured refund of Rs. 11.82 lakh from respective service providers in favour of prospective tourists for having charged them arbitrarily or not providing them the services for which they were charged.

    The Department has taken a series of recent initiatives to bring transparency and promptness in addressing any complaints from the tourists. Separate monitoring teams have already been set up at all destinations comprising respective Resort Officers, representatives from Development Authorities and Tourist Police.

    This is in addition to a central monitoring team comprising senior officers to check the compliance of J&K Tourist Trade Act and ensure that tourists are treated in a manner befitting to the hospitality traditions of the place, they feel safe and in no way have any complaints of cheating, touting, overcharging.

    The Department of Tourism has advised all tourism service providers to desist from any sort of cheating or overcharging from the tourists. The Department has made it amply clear that relevant provisions of J&K Registration of Tourist Trade Act-1978/2012 and other penal laws would be invoked in case of deviant stakeholders.

    Secretary Tourism, Sarmad Hafeez along with Director, Tourism Kashmir, Fazlul Haseeb during a recent review meeting of the Department had given clear instructions for close monitoring by Resort Officers in this regard and not to allow any single service provider to damage the reputation of the whole tourism sector or genuine service providers.

    A spokesman of the Department said though it was good that we are witnessing a bumper season of tourist arrivals, it was incumbent upon the stakeholders and the Department to ensure that tourists are attended decently, properly and charged fairly for the services they utilize so that they return back with memories as beautiful as Kashmir is known for.

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    #Tourism #Department #Registers #Complaints #Cheating #Act #Violations

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Pakistan’s rights body finds spike in rights violations against Ahmadi community

    Pakistan’s rights body finds spike in rights violations against Ahmadi community

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    Lahore: A fact-finding mission led by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has reported an alarming uptick in the persecution of the minority Ahmadi community in the country’s Punjab province.

    The HRCP report, released on Wednesday, found evidence to suggest that the civil administration in Gujranwala and Wazirabad districts of Punjab were directly involved in destroying minarets on Ahmadi sites of worship in the last couple of months, following objections raised against the community by a local political-religious outfit.

    “The administration claims to have done so to circumvent the threat of mob violence,” the report said, adding that the way authorities handled the matter only fostered growing hostility towards the community, making community members more vulnerable.

    The Rights body expressed concerns on various issues faced by the minority community, including the desecration of Ahmadi graves, the destruction of minarets at their worship sites, and the FIRs filed against the members for carrying out ritual animal sacrifice on Eid.

    “Of particular concern is the administration’s perception that some legal and constitutional provisions provide room for the persecution of this kind, although the report notes that, under Article 20(b) of the Constitution, this is not the case,” the report said.

    “While the mission understands that the local bureaucracy, police and judiciary were successfully intimidated by a religious group (Tehreek-e-Laibbaik Pakistan), their response displays a pitiful inability to manage law and order while respecting the fundamental rights of the Ahmadi community,” the report added.

    The mission recommended the judgments of the Supreme Court from 2014 and 2021 be implemented, which includes the establishment of a special police force to guard religious minorities’ places of worship.

    It also called for developing the police’s capacity to deal with the threat of mob violence in such situations.

    Last month, an elderly woman of the Ahmadi community was denied burial at a graveyard by a local cleric and his followers in the Sialkot district of Punjab.

    In the past, such incidents occurred in other Ahmadi graveyards in Punjab, but not a single culprit was arrested or put on trial.

    Minorities, especially Ahmadis, are very vulnerable in Pakistan and are often targeted by religious extremists.

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    #Pakistans #rights #body #finds #spike #rights #violations #Ahmadi #community

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )