Tag: wait

  • Faith lifted Pittsburgh Jews in long wait for massacre trial

    Faith lifted Pittsburgh Jews in long wait for massacre trial

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    On Monday, jury selection is scheduled to begin in the long-delayed trial of the suspect, accused of dozens of charges including hate crimes resulting in death.

    The three congregations are wary of what’s to come. Some members may be called to testify, and they’re bracing for graphic evidence and testimony that could revive the traumas of the attack on Oct. 27, 2018 — often referred to around here as simply 10/27.

    The tension can be felt in private conversations and encounters — the griefs, the anxieties, the feelings of being in a media fishbowl.

    But each in their own ways, members are finding renewed purpose in honoring those lost in the attack, in the bold practice of their faith, in activism on issues like gun violence and immigration, in taking a stand against antisemitism and other forms of bigotry.

    “We don’t want to be silenced as Jews,” said Rich Weinberg, chair of the social action committee for Dor Hadash. “We want to be active as Jews with an understanding of Jewish values. … We are going to still be here. We will not be intimidated.”

    That was evident even in subtle details of a Passover service held earlier this month in New Light’s chapel, joined by some members of Dor Hadash.

    Some offering Yizkor, or remembrance, prayers were doing so in honor of slain loved ones. One prayer was read in memory of the “Kedoshim of Pittsburgh, murdered al kiddush Hashem” — holy martyrs, killed while sanctifying God’s name. The prayer, modeled on prayers for Jewish martyrs of medieval Europe, has been woven into the ritual fabric of Jewish Pittsburgh.

    One of those leading Passover prayers was Carol Black, who survived the attack that claimed the life of her brother, Richard Gottfried, and two other New Light members, Melvin Wax and Daniel Stein. They had led much of New Light’s ritual worship.

    “Rich and Dan and Mel were our religious heart,” said Stephen Cohen, co-president of New Light. “And we had some very big shoes to fill.”

    Members such as Black and Bruce Hyde have stepped into them. Hyde said when he once read a passage that had been read by Stein, he felt his presence: “He was up there with me.”

    Cohen said the congregation had three priorities after the attack: to memorialize those lost, to continue their ritual life and to further religious education. New Light, like Tree of Life, is part of the moderate Conservative denomination of Judaism.

    The congregation dedicated a monument honoring its three martyrs — shaped with images of Torah scrolls and prayer shawls — at its cemetery, where it also created a chapel adorned with stained glass windows and other mementos honoring the victims.

    New Light Co-President Barbara Caplan said her dream for the congregation is “that we have many more years of Friday night services, Saturday morning services, holidays together, where we just go on being the family that we are.”

    Cohen said the congregation has been overwhelmed by support from Christian, Sikh and other communities and wanted to build on those relationships. It has held Bible studies with local Black churches, and members visited the Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, drawing solace from a congregation that lost nine members to a racist gunman in 2015. “I’ve never been part of a group hug of a hundred people,” Cohen recalled.

    All three of the modest-sized congregations have been meeting in nearby synagogues since the attack closed the Tree of Life building.

    Rabbi Jeffrey Myers had been leading Tree of Life Congregation for just over a year when he survived 10/27. He carries the scarred memories of the gunshots that killed seven members: Joyce Fienberg, Rose Mallinger, Cecil and David Rosenthal, Bernice and Sylvan Simon and Irving Younger. Andrea Wedner, Mallinger’s daughter, was wounded in the attack.

    Myers continues to speak forcefully against the bigotry behind it.

    His mission is “primarily to help my congregation community heal,” Myers said. “But beyond it is to speak up, to be a voice, to say, ‘No, this isn’t okay. It’s not acceptable. It never was. And it can never be.’”

    He’d like to think the trial will expose the dangers of rising bigotry, but “it takes a concerted effort to be able to … walk a mile in someone else’s shoes,” he said. But it affects more than Jews. ”Someone who is an antisemite is most likely also the possessor of a long laundry list of personal grievances and other groups that that person does not like.”

    Members are each recovering in their own ways, congregation president Alan Hausman said.

    Each week when he makes announcements, Hausman said he includes this one: “It’s OK not to be OK, and we will get through this together.”

    On Sunday, the day before jury selection, the Tree of Life Congregation is having a closure ceremony for its historic building. The congregation and a partner organization plan a major overhaul of the site, which will combine worship space with a memorial and antisemitism education, including about the Holocaust.

    “We’re not really leaving, we will be back,” said Hausman.

    “Hopefully we’ll be once again a happy, grounded, 160-year-old congregation,” added member Audrey Glickman, a survivor. “Back to being a solid group of people who come together regularly and do our thing.”

    Dor Hadash, founded 60 years ago, is Pittsburgh’s only congregation in the progressive Reconstructionist movement of Judaism. Many members are drawn to its interlocking focuses on worship, study and social activism.

    It was that activism that appears to have drawn the shooting suspect — who fulminated online against HIAS, a Jewish refugee resettlement agency — to the address where Dor Hadash met. The congregation was listed on HIAS’ website as a participant in a National Refugee Shabbat, which wove concern for migrants into Sabbath worship.

    On 10/27, members Jerry Rabinowitz and Dan Leger were gathering for a Torah study when they heard the gunshots and ran to help. Rabinowitz was killed, and Leger seriously wounded.

    But the attack has only emboldened Dor Hadash members.

    They were soon organizing what became a separate group, Squirrel Hill Stands Against Gun Violence, advocating for gun safety legislation. And they redoubled their support for immigrants, refugees and their helpers such as HIAS. The congregation has sponsored a refugee family originally from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. And they have taken a strong stand against rising antisemitism and white supremacy.

    “I think advocacy has been a huge part of our healing,” said Dana Kellerman, communications chair for Dor Hadash. Advocacy “isn’t just about making myself feel better,” she added. “It is about trying to move the needle so that this doesn’t happen to somebody else.”

    The congregation has been growing since the attack, said its president, Jo Recht. The historically lay-led congregation has hired its first staff rabbi, Amy Bardack. Her formal installation is this Sunday — a date that wasn’t specifically chosen in advance of the trial but that provides a welcome occasion of celebration.

    “There are a lot of people who are seeking some way to help so that the world is a more compassionate place,” Recht said.

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    #Faith #lifted #Pittsburgh #Jews #long #wait #massacre #trial
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • General Physician at DH Handwara Loiters Around As Patients Wait Endlessly

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    Several doctors appointed new at the hospital, will take us time to streamline things: Deputy MS

    Rehan Showkat

    Handwara, Apr 16 (GNS): Coming in a complete disdain to service manuals, the general physician ‘on call’ circumvented patients, who had been waiting for him for hours altogether at District Hospital Handwara on Sunday evening.

    A patient called GNS to express his resentment over the absence of doctor on call at the district hospital. “We have been waiting here for several hours now for the arrival of the doctor on call, but there has been no whiff for anyone where he has gone”, said a local attending his wife.

    “After completing the required tests for several hours while observing fast, I had to take her to the physician but was asked to wait for his arrival”, he said. “After waiting for hours altogether, we even tried to reach the doctors through mobile call, but the said doctor, a general physician, first asked us to wait for some time and then didn’t take any calls”, the attendant claimed.

    “On sensing his adamant attitude, I had to take my wife , who is two month pregnant, back to home without getting to consult the doctor”, he said.

    “I was accompanied by several other patients and their attendants at the hospital”, he further said.

    When contacted, Deputy Medical Superintendent District Hospital Handwara told GNS that there has been appointment of several new doctors at the hospital. “It will take us time to streamline the things”, he said. (GNS)

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    #General #Physician #Handwara #Loiters #Patients #Wait #Endlessly

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )

  • Sensex opens with losses; investors wait for RBI’s rate hike decision

    Sensex opens with losses; investors wait for RBI’s rate hike decision

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    Mumbai: Domestic key indices of equity markets made marginal losses during the early trading hours on Thursday.

    Investors were in wait-and-watch mode as the outcome of the Reserve Bank of India’s three-day deliberations will be announced by the central bank’s governor in the morning. Global cues seemed weak as central banks across the world remained cautious about the bank crisis.

    BSE’s 50-share Sensex lost 86 points to 59,603.20 while NSE’s Nifty dipped 25 points to 17,532.15 during the morning trade on Thursday.

    MS Education Academy

    In Asian markets, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was down 0.48 per cent, Japan’s Nikkei declined 1.07 per cent, China’s Shanghai dropped 0.28 per cent and S&P ASX dipped 0.26 per cent on Thursday’s morning.

    In American markets, Nasdaq 100 dropped 1.01 per cent, S&P declined 0.25 per cent and Dow Jones gained 0.24 per cent.

    In European markets, Deutsche Borse dipped 0.53 per cent, FTSE 100 gained 0.37 per cent, and Amsterdam Exchange was trading in the positive territory, as Asian markets opened on Thursday morning.

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) started its monetary policy meeting on April 3, 2023. The outcome of the meeting will be announced today at 10 am by Governor Shaktikanta Das. All stakeholders and investors would be watching the outcome keenly which might influence how they buy or sell their stocks in these few days. The RBI’s monetary policy committee (MPC) is widely expected to hike the repo rate by 25 basis points (bps) in order to combat rising inflation.

    On Wednesday, key equity benchmarks extended their rising streak for a fourth straight session. Sensex jumped 582.87 points or 0.99 per cent to 59,689.31. The Nifty of NSE rose 159 points or 0.91 per cent to 17,557.05. Both the indices have climbed 3.6 per cent in four sessions.

    In the broader market, the S&P BSE Mid-Cap index added 0.11 per cent while the S&P BSE Small-Cap index gained 0.95 per cent.

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    #Sensex #opens #losses #investors #wait #RBIs #rate #hike #decision

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Automakers are resigned. Manchin is furious. Europe has to wait.

    Automakers are resigned. Manchin is furious. Europe has to wait.

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    congress treasury budget 84667

    At its heart, Friday’s guidance creates a way to determine which car and truck models will qualify for the $7,500-per-vehicle credit under last year’s Inflation Reduction Act, based on their compliance with a new thicket of restrictions on where their battery minerals and components come from.

    It leaves some key details yet to be filled in, however, and the Treasury Department could make more changes once a comment period closes on June 16.

    An initial list of qualifying vehicles will be available April 18, with updates posting each month.

    POLITICO took a look at how the new guidance applies — and who wins and loses now that it’s been made public.

    Automakers: Some vehicles will qualify, but many won’t

    Verdict: A GRUDGING WIN

    Given the law’s considerable constraints, Treasury’s interpretation is about as friendly as possible to automakers and anyone else interested in seeing more people driving electric vehicles. That’s because it will mean that at least some of the electric vehicles now on the market will be eligible for the federal tax credits — though many that now qualify for the tax breaks will lose them.

    Carmakers didn’t have to get even this much accommodation. The strictest interpretation of the law’s sourcing requirements could have meant that not a single vehicle qualified.

    Also, because Treasury delayed the issuance of the proposal until the last day of March, then offered another two weeks before it takes effect, automakers got more time to prepare to prepare for the new restrictions — and sell cars — than Congress had envisioned when it wrote the law.

    John Bozzella, Here’s what I can say: this latest turn will further reduce the number of eligible EVs. Fewer vehicles (and fewer customers) will qualify for the full $7,500 credit in the near term.
    In fact, this period may go down as the highwater mark for EV tax credit eligibility since the IRA passed last year.

    Consumers will have limited selection — but that will broaden

    Verdict: A PARTIAL WIN

    For now, consumers will only be able to apply the tax credit to a limited number of electric vehicle models, and that will disappoint those inclined to move to an electric vehicle sooner than later. But Treasury intends to publish a monthly list of vehicles that are eligible, a number is expected to grow steadily as manufacturers navigate the requirements.

    On climate, trading one polluting industry for another

    Verdict: MIXED

    Transportation is largest contributor to the United States’ greenhouse gas pollution, so getting drivers behind the wheel of electric cars and trucks is a major priority of the environmental movement and the Biden administration. But it comes at a cost — mining what’s necessary to make electric vehicle batteries trades one polluting industry for another.

    Climate advocates are also alarmed that the administration is rushing to negotiate trade pacts with Japan — and possibly Europe — without including standard safeguards for environmental and labor protections. Some some Democrats in charge of writing tax laws, such as Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden, share those concerns.

    Sen. Joe Manchin thinks he got rolled

    Verdict: LOSE

    The West Virginia Democrat insisted on the domestic sourcing provisions as a condition for his vote on the Inflation Reduction Act — one of the Biden administration’s biggest priorities. But he’s accused Treasury of trying to skirt the law almost since it was signed, and earlier this week groused that he thought Treasury was “going to try to screw me on this” by allowing too many countries to participate in supplying electric vehicle materials.

    His goal is to make sure U.S. energy security is under U.S. control as much as possible — or at least under the control of friendly nations, and definitely not China. And he said he wants the jobs created by the law to be created in the United States.

    Manchin is particularly incensed by the guidance’s sections allowing Treasury to determine which countries America has a free trade agreement with, “since this term is not defined in statute.” The guidance notes that this could include “newly negotiated critical minerals agreements.” of the sort that the U.S. just negotiated with Japan and is negotiating with Europe.

    In a statement, Manchin teed off on the guidance, calling it “horrific” and a “pathetic excuse to spend more tax payer dollars as quickly as possible and further cedes control to the Chinese Communist Party in the process.”

    U.S. miners get customers, but more competition from abroad

    Verdict: MIXED

    The U.S. critical mining industry is getting a huge boost from the law, which seeks to spur the creation of a domestic clean-energy supply chain that doesn’t yet exist. Miners have pushed to retain the law’s original provisions, to keep demand for their minerals high.

    But they will face a growing number of foreign competitors as the Biden administration inks trade deals with more U.S. allies.

    Also in flux is how Treasury will define “foreign entity of concern,” a term that has riled hard-rock miners worried that battery components assembled abroad will include minerals from countries like China. Treasury says it will make that decision later this year.

    Europe still awaits its seat at the table

    Verdict: WIN (EVENTUALLY)

    Earlier this week, the Biden administration announced a novel trade arrangement allowing Japan to supply mineral resources for electric vehicles under the tax credit, despite not having a broad free-trade agreement with the United States. It’s a model that the U.S. could emulate with Europe, with a deal that could be finished before the rule takes effect April 18.

    Treasury officials say that even if it takes longer than that, Europe can be written in later.

    Hannah Northey contributed to this report.

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    #Automakers #resigned #Manchin #furious #Europe #wait
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Opinion | Republicans Can’t Wait for Trump to Implode

    Opinion | Republicans Can’t Wait for Trump to Implode

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    All sorts of caveats are necessary.

    It’s still very early in a late-developing race. There are only two current or former officeholders in the race, Trump and Nikki Haley.

    There’s no doubt that Trump has taken on water, and is at his weakest since sometime in the first part of 2016.

    Ron DeSantis has tended to do better against Trump in head-to-head polling (although he trails in a new Yahoo poll), and Trump has looked vulnerable in all-important Iowa and New Hampshire.

    Finally, we’ll have to see where DeSantis settles in the polling, if and when he actually gets in the race.

    All that said, unless Trump’s support in surveys is a complete mirage, he continues to have a formidable grip on the GOP. There’s been a lot of buzz about DeSantis, understandably, who’s done all the right things to establish a national brand, win credibility with populists, and cultivate big donors. But there should be no mistake regarding Trump’s leadership of the party, he can set up like the Texans defending their canon at the Battle of Gonzales and defy his adversaries to “come and take it.”

    That is a daunting prospect. It’s one thing to imagine supplanting Trump as he slip-slides away, defeating himself with his own obsessions and animosities; it’s another to figure out a way to topple him, to come up with lines of attack that diminish him and convince his voters to go elsewhere.

    Since he first entered the race in 2015, Trump has benefited from a natural sense of command. What he’s lacked in policy depth or in dignity, he’s made up with his considerable personal force and authority. In the 2016 primary debates, he was the tall, orange-hued man standing in the middle of the stage, hushing the other candidates as necessary.

    In the current developing field, he’s obviously the only former president and the only one with a track record of winning (and losing) at the national level. He’s the creator of the movement that nearly everyone else wants to take over or, at the very least, accommodate. He’s the dominant force — the one whose standing in the race affects everything, and, importantly, the one everyone fears.

    The latter quality is a key part of the Trump phenomenon. Other national figures might out-charm their competition (Barack Obama in 2008) or overwhelm them with resources (George W. Bush in 2000, Hillary Clinton in 2016). Trump’s MO is to bludgeon them with highly personal, belittling attacks, in a way that has proven highly effective in the past and quite unpleasant to the targets.

    Nikki Haley had a pretty good launch a couple of weeks ago but among her weakest moments were when she was clearly frightened to say anything at all about Trump, including mentioning a policy difference or two.

    Mike Pence has been more forthright, although even he has leveled criticisms in oblique terms.

    Ron DeSantis, the target of a flurry of initial jabs from Trump, has shrugged them off or parried with very subtle counterpunches.

    None of this is irrational. Why would Haley want to become the subject of Trump’s ire at a time when she’s the only other major politician in the race? Pence can wait to prosecute his case more directly if he launches a campaign. DeSantis is trying to push his own message, most recently on his book tour, and put more points on the board in the coming Florida legislative session — a mud fight with Trump now isn’t in his interest.

    Yet, the disinclination to engage with Trump at all brings back memories of 2016. If it’s a temporary dynamic, that’s one thing; if it’s another prisoner’s dilemma among the non-Trump candidates, waiting for someone else to take him on and hoping to emerge unscathed in the aftermath, it’s repeating the same mistake and expecting a different result.

    If the current situation holds, there’s no way around Trump — only through — and that will require making a case against him.

    To be the man (or the lady), as the immortal Ric Flair said, you’ve got to beat the man. Trump may indeed be beatable, but the latest polling shows him squarely in the way of anyone who wants to take over the party he’s dominated for seven years and counting.

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    #Opinion #Republicans #Wait #Trump #Implode
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • UP: Wait for mosque construction work to start in Ayodhya to end soon

    UP: Wait for mosque construction work to start in Ayodhya to end soon

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    Lucknow: Entangled first in obtaining no-objection certificates (NOCs), followed by a delay in the change of land use, the wait for the construction of the Dhannipur mosque in Ayodhya district of Uttar Pradesh is finally set to end soon.

    A mosque, a hospital, a research institute, a community kitchen and a library are to be constructed by the Indo-Islamic Cultural Foundation (IICF) trust on five acres of land given by the state government. The matter of change of land use has been pending with the Ayodhya Development Authority (ADA) for the last four months. It is expected to be resolved by this week.

    ADA Chairman and Ayodhya Divisional Commissioner Gaurav Dayal told PTI that the decision on the issue of change in land use will be taken up this week.

    “We have received instructions from the government. The issue will be taken up on Monday and a decision will be taken this week,” he said.

    Arshad Khan, the local trustee of the IICF trust, said an application was given in July 2020, seeking approval for the construction of the mosque, the hospital, the research institute, the community kitchen and the library on the land allocated in Dhannipur village of Ayodhya.

    The construction of a Ram temple in Ayodhya was approved a few days before that, even though the application was submitted offline, he added.

    “When we applied for change of land use, the ADA said the application should be made online. On conveying the trust’s inability to do so, people from the authority filed the application online. As the application was submitted online, the portal demanded 15-16 NOCs,” Khan said, adding that it took the trust more than a year to acquire the documents.

    “When the matter was brought to the the then district magistrate’s notice, he helped us get an NOC. After the NOC arrived, the issue of land use change came up in October last year,” he said.

    Khan said whenever the ADA is asked about the delay in the change of land use, it says the matter will be resolved at the next board meeting.

    In a historic judgment on November 9, 2019, the Supreme Court ordered the construction of a Ram temple at a disputed site in Ayodhya and asked the government to allocate five acres of land for the construction of a mosque at a prominent place in the district.

    The IICF trust, constituted for the construction of the mosque, announced its plans to build a hospital, a community kitchen, a library and a research institute, along with the mosque.

    Trust secretary Athar Hussain had hoped that the formalities related to land-use change would be completed by the end of November last year. It was expected that the construction work of the mosque and other facilities would start in December and the structure would be built in a year’s time.

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    #Wait #mosque #construction #work #start #Ayodhya

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • PM Kisan: The wait is over! 13th installment will be released next

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    It is reported that Prime Minister Narendra Modi will release 2000 rupees for the 13th installment of PM Kisan Samman Nidhi on Monday 27 February. The program will be held in Belagavi, Karnataka. This information has been given by Union Minister of State for Agriculture Shobha Karandalaje.

    PM Kisan Samman Nidhi Scheme 2023: The beneficiaries of Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi Yojana have big news. Today, on February 24, the PM Kisan Yojana has completed 4 years, but farmers will have to wait till Monday for the next installment. It is reported that Prime Minister Narendra Modi will release 2000 rupees for the 13th installment of PM Kisan Samman Nidhi on Monday 27 February. The program will be held in Belagavi, Karnataka. This information has been given by Union Minister of State for Agriculture Shobha Karandalaje.

    Union Minister tweeted

    Earlier news was coming that on February 24, PM Narendra Modi will transfer 2000-2000 in one click to 11 crore farmers, because in 2019, the PM Kisan Yojana was launched on February 24, but now the date final. Has occurred. Union Minister of State for Agriculture Shobha Karandalaje tweeted that on the occasion of the birthday of former Chief Minister BS Yeddyurappa, Prime Minister Modi will transfer 13th installments to the account of crores of farmers. Shivamogga has been a stronghold of former Karnataka Chief Minister and BJP leader BS Yeddyurappa and He is an MLA from Shikaripura assembly constituency, while his elder son BY Raghavendra is an MP from Shivamogga parliamentary constituency.

    These documents including EKYC mandatory

    Please tell that the Prime Minister Kisan Samman Nidhi Yojana is a big scheme of the Central Government, in which farmers are given 6000 rupees annually in 3 installments. Keep in mind that the benefit of 13th installment will be given only to those farmers who have completed the process of land verification along with e-KYC and link to bank account Aadhaar card. Farmers continued to visit the official website PMKISAN.Gov.in for more information and updates. If there is any problem related to the scheme, farmers can contact the official email ID PMKISAN-IICT@gov.in. Helpline number 155261 or 1800115526 (Toll Free) or 011-23381092 can also be called.

    PM Kisan- Check your name in the list

    • First of all visit the official website of PM farmer.
    • After this, go to the ‘Farmers Corner’ section on the home page and select the
    • ‘Beneficiary Status’ option.
    • Now enter your Aadhaar number or bank account number. After this, click on the option of ‘Get Data’.
    • As soon as the process is completed, the status of the installment will be known in front of you.
    • If YES is written in front of the status of PM Kisan Yojana, then you understand that 13th installment will be transferred to your account.
    • If NO is written in any of these places, then your installment can stop.

    https://twitter.com/shobhabjp/status/1628729677748033315?s=20



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    #Kisan #wait #13th #installment #released

    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Passport applicants wait for hours at PSKs in Hyderabad

    Passport applicants wait for hours at PSKs in Hyderabad

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    Hyderabad: Due to the heavy rush, passport applicants are not only waiting for more than a month to get appointments but also standing for hours for their turns at PSKs in Hyderabad.

    At PSKs, Hyderabad residents especially women are facing difficulties as many of them are not even finding chairs to sit down leaving them with no option but to stand waiting for hours for their token numbers.

    Confusion over token numbers at PSKs in Hyderabad

    At the PSKs in Hyderabad, passport applicants have to pass through three stages viz., A, B, and C.

    Though applicants hardly wait for their turn at Stage A, they usually have to wait for hours for their turns at stages B and C.

    Speaking to Siasat.com, an applicant who visited Begumpet PSK on Thursday said that, it took over three hours to complete the entire process at the center. ‘I stood for nearly one hour for my turn at the verification stage and over one and half hours for granting stage’, he said.

    ‘Some of the applicants at the center were confused over the token numbers as they were not appearing in order’, he added.

    Though, attempts are being made to reduce the wait time by arranging special passport drives on Saturdays, the wait time for appointment dates at all PSKs in Hyderabad has not come down.

    Passport appointment availability in Hyderabad

    Out of these five PSKs in Telangana, three are located in Hyderabad. They are

    1. PSK Ameerpet
    2. PSK Begumpet
    3. PSK Tolichowki

    At all three PSKs in Hyderabad, the earliest passport appointment available is March 14.

    Location of PSKsApplication type/QuotaEarliest appointment date
    AmeerpetPassport/NormalMarch 28, 2023
    AmeerpetPassport/TatkalMarch 14, 2023
    AmeerpetPCCMarch 7, 2023
    BegumpetPassport/NormalMarch 27, 2023
    BegumpetPassport/TatkalMarch 14, 2023
    BegumpetPCCMarch 7, 2023
    ToliChowkiPassport/NormalMarch 29, 2023
    ToliChowkiPassport/TatkalMarch 14, 2023
    ToliChowkiPCCMarch 8, 2023

    How to apply for passport?

    Those who want to apply for a fresh passport or renew their expired passport need to apply on the Passport Seva website.

    Steps to apply for passport at PSK in Hyderabad

    1. Visit the official website of Passport Seva (click here).
    2. New users need to register whereas, existing users can log in to the portal.
    3. Once logged in, click on the link ‘Apply for Fresh Passport/Re-issue of Passport’.
    4. Applicants can fill out the form online or download it, fill it out offline and then upload it.
    5. After filling out the form, applicants have to pay which varies for various categories of passports.
    6. Once payment is done, applicants can book passport appointment slots at PSKs.
    7. At PSK, applicants have to pass through various stages.
    8. Finally, after police verification, the passport will be posted to the address mentioned in the application form.
    PSK Dec23

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    #Passport #applicants #wait #hours #PSKs #Hyderabad

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cool your jets: Why the West is making Ukraine wait for fighter planes 

    Cool your jets: Why the West is making Ukraine wait for fighter planes 

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    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    The West isn’t really saying “never” on fighter jets for Ukraine — it just wants to focus first on getting Kyiv weapons for a looming offensive.

    That’s the sentiment emerging in the wake of U.S. President Joe Biden’s blunt “no” — echoed to various degrees by leaders in Germany and the U.K. — to the question of whether he would be sending Ukraine the fighter jets it is requesting. While officials have publicly remained relatively unequivocal that no jets are forthcoming, private discussions indicate it may actually just be a matter of time.

    At the Pentagon, senior U.S. officials acknowledge Ukraine will need to modernize its aging Air Force with new fighter jets — eventually. But for now, officials are focused on sending the weapons Kyiv needs for the immediate fight. 

    The same conversations are happening in Europe. Countries like Poland, the Netherlands and France have indicated an openness to the idea, but officials stress there’s considerable work to be done just to get Ukraine the taboo-shattering weapons promised in recent weeks. 

    “I think it is an issue of longer-term perspective,” said one Eastern European senior diplomat. “We need to deliver what was committed in January as soon as possible. It is really impressive, but time is of the essence.”

    The chatter indicates that while the tenor is negative for now, the issue is one likely to linger behind the scenes and eventually reemerge. 

    It’s a pattern that has occurred over and over for the Western alliance since the war began: Something that was once forbidden — from German weapons in a war zone to Ukraine receiving modern tanks — creeps its way toward reality as the war grinds on, the West’s commitment deepens and equipment requiring significant training no longer seems irrelevant. 

    “A lot of people still don’t understand that the war is far from over,” Ukrainian Deputy Foreign Minister Andriy Melnyk told POLITICO. “In fact, Putin appears to have even more of an appetite than ever. Without air support you can’t fight a modern war.”

    The world has changed

    The possibility of sending Ukraine fighter jets stretches back to the war’s early days.

    In the weeks after Russia sent troops streaming across the border, the Polish government claimed it was ready to transfer Soviet-era fighter planes to the U.S. so they could then go to Ukrainian pilots. 

    A stunned Washington shot down the offer. The training was too difficult, officials said, and sending planes from a NATO base into Ukraine could risk a direct confrontation with Russia. The subject faded away. 

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    At the Pentagon, senior U.S. officials acknowledge Ukraine will need to modernize its aging Air Force with new fighter jets | Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

    Nearly a year later, much has changed. An early blitz on Kyiv has morphed into trench warfare. A war that may last days or weeks now could linger for years. 

    Along the way, Western allies have blown through one red line after another. Heavy weaponry, howitzers, long-range rocket systems, armored vehicles — all eventually made their way to Ukraine. And finally, in a watershed moment last month, allies joined together to pledge roughly 80 modern, Western-made tanks.  

    Suddenly, the idea of fighter jets didn’t seem so outlandish. Ukraine seized the moment, renewing its request. Momentum seemed to be growing. Then Biden and his European cohorts stepped in to slow things down. 

    Their caution reflected behind-the-scenes arguments from Western diplomats, who said it was impossible to send Kyiv jets and train pilots in time for a looming Russian offensive. And, they noted, new planes are not crucial for those upcoming battles anyway.

    Still, a military adviser to the Ukrainian government said the discussion on jets is simply in its “early days” and expressed confidence the Western position will evolve in the coming weeks. 

    “In Germany,” Melnyk recalled, “I learned that it was helpful to take people out of their comfort zone. Much of the population had no idea what weapons system the army even had in its arsenal. We helped to educate them.”

    U.S. officials, congressional aides and advisers involved conceded they are continuing to work on possible jet deliveries behind the scenes.  

    “They remember him saying ‘no’ to Patriot and Abrams for a while too,” said one U.S. defense official, recalling Biden’s evolving comments on air-defense systems and tanks.

    Fuel up for months of jet talk

    Indeed, the jets chatter is far from dead. 

    Kyiv has focused its demands on so-called fourth-generation jets like the U.S.-made F-16s, which have been in service since the 1980s. Ukrainian military officials estimate the F-16 training could take six months; some U.S. officials say it could even be as little as three to four months for seasoned Ukrainian pilots. The cutting-edge F-35s, meanwhile, have never been on the table.

    While it’s unlikely the U.S. would send its own fighter jets, which are in high demand for national security missions around the world, officials might consider letting other countries transfer their own F-16s, said a senior U.S. Defense Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive topic. The U.S. must sign off on any F-16 transfers because of export restrictions.

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    The West isn’t really saying “never” on fighter jets for Ukraine — it just wants to focus first on getting Kyiv weapons for a looming offensive | Omar Marques/Getty Images

    Some European countries with F-16s in their inventory, like the Netherlands, have already shown they are open to doing exactly that. France is also transitioning to an air force of Rafale planes, meaning Paris will have older jets it could give to Ukraine — jets that wouldn’t need American sign-off.

    “There are other countries that are talking about this. So, as they come forward with proposals for them to do it, I think we’ll have those conversations,” the senior DoD official said. “I don’t think we are opposed on the fourth-generation aircraft issue, I just think we have to make sure that we continue to prioritize.”

    Right now, officials are more focused on sending Ukraine air defenses to protect Ukrainian cities and infrastructure, as well as armor and artillery for the expected spring offensive. Sending Kyiv fighter jets “does not solve the cruise missile problem, it does not solve the drone problem,” the official said, adding that there have been no high-level discussions yet about sending F-16s.

    Behind the scenes, U.S. administration officials are careful not to rule out jet shipments. White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby refused multiple requests to elaborate on the president’s comments on Tuesday. A Pentagon spokesperson said there were no new announcements.

    “The biggest risk is prolonging the conflict,” former NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen told POLITICO on Wednesday. “That’s why we have an interest in ending the war quickly with weapons.” 

    Western allies, Rasmussen said, must ship Ukraine everything it needs without delay.

    “If we deliver all the weapons Ukraine needs, they can win,” he argued, stressing that even included retaking Crimea, the region Russia annexed in 2014 that many Western allies consider a no-go zone for the moment.

    The next major moment on defense ministers’ calendar is February 14, when officials gather at NATO headquarters in Brussels for a meeting of the so-called Ramstein format — the grouping for allies to discuss weapons shipments for Ukraine. 

    While the issue of jets is likely to come up at the gathering, officials see the conversation on jets as a “long-term” project, as one senior European defense official put it. Ukraine may raise the topic at the February meeting, the official said, “but the focus will still be on air defense, tanks, ammo.”

    Back in Paris, the mood was nonetheless upbeat on Tuesday as Ukraine’s Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov met with French officials. Reznikov predicted Ukraine could receive F-16s, the Swedish-made Gripens “or something from France.” 

    During the recent discussions around tanks, France moved early to send Ukraine light tanks — a decision it argues set the stage for allies to later approve the norm-breaking battalion of heavy tanks. Now, France is sending cryptic signals it may aim to play a similar role. 

    “I wonder what the messaging means,” said Pierre Haroche, a Paris-based lecturer in international security at the Queen Mary University of London. “If France wants to retain leadership, it has to follow words with actions.”

    Lili Bayer and Matthew Karnitschnig contributed reporting.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )