Tag: worst

  • The 5 best — and worst — places to work in the U.S. government, according to federal workers

    The 5 best — and worst — places to work in the U.S. government, according to federal workers

    [ad_1]

    The rankings below are for what the survey calls “large agencies,” meaning organizations with 15,000 or more employees. Findings were organized by each of the 17 large agencies’ overall rank, as well as how each one fared in different categories.

    The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has the top overall score and came in first in several categories such as pay and effective leadership, but trails behind the Intelligence Community for work-life balance.

    Meanwhile, Department of Health and Human Services snagged second place in the overall rankings but was fourth place in pay and in two diversity and equity subcategories — NASA secured the top spot in those subgroups.

    The Intelligence Community secured third overall, but was fifth in the performance: agency subcategory and fourth in effective leadership: supervisors. NASA again secured the top spot in both those subcategories.

    The Department of Commerce placed fourth overall but was in 12th place for effective leadership: empowerment, 11th place for innovation, ninth for work-life balance and eighth for pay.

    Rounding out the top five in overall rankings is the Department of Veterans Affairs. Despite the high score, the agency placed 12th for effective leadership: supervisors, 11th for work-life balance and eighth for innovation.

    The top five

    1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration

    2. Department of Health and Human Services

    3. Intelligence Community

    4. Department of Commerce

    5. Department of Veterans Affairs

    The bottom five

    13 and 14. Department of State and Department of Navy (tied)

    15. Department of Justice

    16. Department of Homeland Security

    17. Social Security Administration

    [ad_2]
    #worst #places #work #U.S #government #federal #workers
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • In Turkey, women are feeling the worst aftershocks of the earthquake

    In Turkey, women are feeling the worst aftershocks of the earthquake

    [ad_1]

    By Willow Kreutzer, University of Iowa and Stephen Bagwell, University of Missouri-St. Louis
    Columbia

    When natural disasters strike, women and girls tend to experience disproportionate challenges and heightened risks.

    They are much more likely than men to experience sexual violence and health problems. Women and girls also face greater professional and educational setbacks.

    So it should come as no surprise that challenges continue to mount for women in Turkey and Syria following a 7.8 magnitude earthquake on February 6, 2023, that killed more than 50,000 people and displaced 3 million people.

    Earthquake survivors in Turkey also include 356,000 pregnant women who, at the end of February 2023, urgently needed medical care, according to the United Nations. Some women have had to give birth to their children in collapsed buildings.

    Women are also more likely than men to be left out of government policies and programs responding to the disaster, often forcing them to migrate away from disaster zones.

    Death rates are higher during disasters for women even in some cases of rich countries, due in part to such factors as women not wanting to leave the home during an emergency.

    We are scholars of human rights and political science. It is important to keep in mind that as natural disasters take a disproportionate toll on women, these crises also tend to shift women’s political attitudes.

    While the disproportionate impact of disasters on women has been well documented, a lesser-known imbalance is how such crises tend to shift political attitudes.

    Research shows that women’s trust in government declines after a natural disaster, while men’s political trust increases in both poor and rich countries.

    In countries like Turkey with multiple disasters a year, studies show that women’s trust in government will likely decline over time.

    This includes their trust in government institutions, as well as their trust in those with power in government – political leaders, parties and parliament.

    When women do not see those in power as meeting their needs and trying to support and protect them, their trust wanes.

    Why women are more vulnerable post-disaster

    There are a few main reasons why women tend to feel the worst effects of a natural disaster.

    First, societal expectations placed on women as the main caretakers in the household in both more and less economically developed countries are exacerbated following a disaster.

    Women are often tasked with collecting and carrying food and water to their families, for example, as well as tending to their children and other family members.
    Women’s responsibilities as the primary caretaker often place them in dangerous settings after disasters, either travelling through rugged terrain to reach water and food or staying in unstable housing structures to cook and help their families.

    Second, governments tend not to prioritize women’s particular health needs. Pregnant or nursing mothers may be unable to receive routine care, leading to an increase in risk of death or disease to both mother and baby.

    While there are some international relief groups and projects that focus on providing menstrual health care to women following a disaster, this kind of response is not common.

    Third, women are more likely to be living in poverty, with fewer economic alternatives than men following a disaster.

    They are slower to return to work, if they can at all, and are often denied government relief under the assumption that their husbands will support them. This further decreases women’s overall safety.

    A series of earthquakes in Turkey

    Following the February 2023 earthquake, advocacy groups and relief response agencies voiced concern that women and girls in Turkey were left in hastily constructed refugee camps that did not have access to safe bathrooms, clean water or period products.

    Women and especially young girls living in temporary shelters are at a higher risk of gender-based violence and early child marriage, according to humanitarian agencies like Plan International.

    This is especially true if women do not have designated areas separate from men as is the case in Turkey.

    The Turkish advocacy group The Women’s Coalition has asked the government to remove preexisting obstacles to supporting women, like ending bans on popular social media sites.

    This is because social media can play a vital role in coordinating relief and rescue efforts, and these bans are actively keeping women and LGBTQ organisations from connecting with people and providing assistance in earthquake-affected areas.

    Women and girls may also be wary of asking male relief workers for help with their reproductive needs. Hesitancy to ask for help from male workers extends beyond reproductive needs.

    Women’s rights activists in Turkey have said that women who were caught naked or without headscarves under the rubble were less likely to ask for help or rescue out of fear.

    Understanding the political ramifications

    People’s trust in the government in Turkey is generally low, and data demonstrates that Turkey could be doing significantly more with its available resources to guarantee respect for human rights overall.

    For example, recent reports by human rights groups indicate that Turkish authorities do not always enforce laws preventing domestic violence, which is common in the country.

    Since people’s trust in politics and government is shaped by lived experiences, we think that solutions to prevent a decline in trust logically involve minimizing the experiences that cause the decline.

    While governments can’t control natural disasters, they can ensure that their responses are more inclusive of women’s needs

    [ad_2]
    #Turkey #women #feeling #worst #aftershocks #earthquake

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • “Youths, worst hit during YSRCP rule…” TDP national general secy Nara Lokesh

    “Youths, worst hit during YSRCP rule…” TDP national general secy Nara Lokesh

    [ad_1]

    Annamayya: Launching a scathing attack on the ruling party, the national general secretary of Telugu Desam Party (TDP) Nara Lokesh on Thursday said that it is the youths, who suffered a lot after YSRCP came to power.

    During his ongoing pada yatra, Yuva Galam, Lokesh interacted with the youths at the Vijaya Ganapathy Function Hall at Maddaiah Garipalli of Thamballapalle Assembly segment.

    “During the regime of Chandrababu Naidu, Andhra Pradesh was known to be the capital of jobs in India but now it is known as Ganja capital of India,” Lokesh said.

    The TDP leader also assured the youths that jobs will be announced every year once his party is voted to power in the State.

    Lokesh asked the youths to strive to bring the TDP back into government again.

    Earlier the youths of the State complained to Lokesh that there is no government degree college nearby for them and the unemployment allowance that was paid during the TDP regime is discontinued now.

    They also complained to Lokesh that there are no self-employment opportunities in the State now.

    The youths asked the TDP leader to brief them on what steps his party will take if it comes back to power to rid the State of drugs.

    Earlier in the day, at the Indiramma Colony campsite, Lokesh paid rich tributes to Potti Sriramulu on the occasion of his birth anniversary.The leaders of the Buduga Janga Welfare Association met Lokesh at the same campsite and apprised him of the problems, they have been facing for the past four years.

    Promising all possible measures for their welfare, Lokesh called upon the Buduga Janga leaders to work hard to bring his father and former State’s CM, Chandrababu back as the chief minister.

    [ad_2]
    #Youths #worst #hit #YSRCP #rule #TDP #national #general #secy #Nara #Lokesh

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • WHO: Turkey, Syria earthquakes ‘worst natural disaster’ in European region in a century

    WHO: Turkey, Syria earthquakes ‘worst natural disaster’ in European region in a century

    [ad_1]

    turkey syria earthquake 62350

    The powerful earthquakes that struck central Turkey and northwest Syria just over a week ago are the “worst natural disaster in the WHO European Region for a century,” said Hans Kluge, the World Health Organization’s regional director for Europe.

    “We are still learning about its magnitude. Its true cost is not known yet,” Kluge said during a press briefing today.

    The WHO’s European Region includes 53 European and Central Asian countries, including Turkey.

    More than 31,000 people are confirmed dead in Turkey, and nearly 5,000 lost their lives across the border in Syria, he said, adding that the figures are expected to rise further. He added that 26 million people across both countries are in need of humanitarian assistance.

    The WHO launched a $43 million appeal to support the earthquake response, with likely more to come.

    “I expect this to at least double over the coming days as we get a better assessment of the massive scale of this crisis and the needs,” Kluge said.

    With water and sanitation facilities being hit, concerns are mounting over health issues, including the spread of infectious diseases. Health care facilities have also been gravely damaged.

    “According to the Turkish authorities, an estimated 80,000 people are in hospital, placing a huge strain on the health system, itself badly damaged by the disaster,” Kluge said.

    “We have initiated the largest deployment of Emergency Medical Teams in the WHO European Region in our 75-year history,” he added. Their goal is to support the damaged medical facilities, focusing on the high number of trauma patients and those with catastrophic injuries.



    [ad_2]
    #Turkey #Syria #earthquakes #worst #natural #disaster #European #region #century
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Turkey-Syria quakes ‘worst’ disaster of region in century: UN

    Turkey-Syria quakes ‘worst’ disaster of region in century: UN

    [ad_1]

    Ankara: The devastating earthquakes that shook southern Turkey and northern Syria was the “worst event” to hit the region in a century, a senior official from the United Nations said.

    “What happened here on Monday, the epicentre of the earthquake, was the worst event in 100 years in this region,” Martin Griffiths, UN Under-Secretary-General for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, told reporters in the Turkish province of Kahramanmaras on Saturday.

    More than 100 countries have sent emergency response teams to Turkey, but “we’re going to need more than that,” Griffiths said.

    The UN would launch the appeal to raise money for agencies to come and help the people who’ve been affected, he added.

    “We have a clear plan tomorrow (or) the day after to give an appeal for a three-month operation to help the people of Turkey with humanitarian assistance, and we will do some similar one for the people of Syria,” he said.

    As they are coming to the end of the rescue phase, the UN official expressed concern for the second phase of the disaster, Xinhua news agency reported.

    “The second phase of a natural disaster of this size is often a medical one, where we have huge worries here and in Syria, of the health problems which have been going on treated,” he noted.

    Turkey’s response to the disaster was “extraordinary,” Griffiths added.

    The death toll from Monday’s devastating earthquakes climbed to 22,327 in Turkey, while another 80,278 injuries were reported in the country, Turkish Health Minister Fahrettin Koca announced on Saturday evening.

    Search and rescue efforts in ten quake-hit 10 provinces of Turkey have now begun to turn to debris removal on the sixth day of the disaster. Rescue teams from across Turkey and around the world were still trying to find survivors in the rubble of toppled buildings and pulled them out against all odds. However, while the number of casualties is soaring, the number of injured pulled out of the rubble was so few on Saturday.

    In a statement, the Turkish Medical Association warned about infectious diseases that may occur after the earthquake. Damage to infrastructure such as electricity, water and sewerage increases the risk of water and food-borne diseases, the statement said.

    Risks increase for acute respiratory infections such as influenza and coronavirus, along with the possibility of contact-transmitted diseases such as scabies, lice, fungi and diarrhoeal diseases, it added.

    At least 160,000 people, including foreign teams, were on the field for search and rescue efforts, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday. All the state dormitories of universities will be reserved for earthquake victims, and university students will have distance learning until the summer, he noted.

    Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu slammed Germany and Austria because their teams have suspended their efforts due to security threats, and criticized them for “slandering” Turkey.

    “Austria’s search and rescue team left the job with the claim of battering … From the first day (of the quake), 416 incidents took place. In the six days before the earthquake, 586 events occurred,” in the region, the Turkish Minister said.

    “As many as 230 people have been detained so far, there are more than 20 arrests. Our friends take the security of the logistics warehouses, the security of the debris fields, the security of the tent sites,” he added.

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

    [ad_2]
    #TurkeySyria #quakes #worst #disaster #region #century

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Smiling at worst times’: Sania Mirza’s new Insta note goes viral

    ‘Smiling at worst times’: Sania Mirza’s new Insta note goes viral

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: Indian tennis star Sania Mirza, who is rumoured to be getting separated from husband Shoaib Malik, has been only adding more and more fuels to the speculations with her cryptic Instagram posts. After writing about ‘faith and holding onto it’, the sports icon shared a post on ‘smiling at worst times’.

    Taking to Insta stories on Friday, Sania Mirza shared a quote that read: “Some days she fools the world with her best smile at her worst times,” which has again added fuel to the fire and sparked debate about their divorce once again in town.

    image 26

    The sports world has been buzzing with strong speculation that Sania Mirza and Shoaib Malik are getting divorced ending their long relationship. This couple got married in 2010 and has been living in Dubai ever since.

    Despite no official confirmation from the couple, reports have emerged claiming that they are ‘no longer together’ and are only co-parenting their son, Izhaan Mirza Malik. The absence of official confirmation has only added to the many rumours surrounding their relationship status.

    While there is no official confirmation from the couple, fans and the public remain eager to find out what the future holds for this sports couple.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News



    [ad_2]
    #Smiling #worst #times #Sania #Mirzas #Insta #note #viral

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )