Tag: wrong

  • Wrong to assume that sacked H-1B staffers have to leave America within 60 days: USCIS director

    Wrong to assume that sacked H-1B staffers have to leave America within 60 days: USCIS director

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    Washington: Amid mass layoffs in the tech sector, the federal agency for immigration services has said it is wrong to assume that sacked workers holding the much-sought-after H-1B visas have to leave the country within 60 days, asserting they have multiple options to stay in the US.

    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.

    In a letter to the Foundation for India and Indian Diaspora Studies, USCIS Director Ur M Jaddou said: “When non-immigrant workers are laid off, they may not be aware of their options and may, in some instances, wrongly assume that they have no option but to leave the country within 60 days.” The Foundation for India and Indian Diaspora Studies (FIIDS), which has been working for laid-off H-1B visa holders, recently wrote to USCIS about the impacts of recent technology sector layoffs and sought an increase to the up to 60-day grace period.

    In the letter addressed to FIIDS director for policy and analysis strategy Khanderao Kand, the USCIS said it acknowledges the financial and emotional impact that job loss can have on employment-based non-immigrant workers and their families in the US.

    “We are aware of the issue of involuntary terminations, especially in the technology sector,” Kand said.

    Thousands of highly skilled foreign-born workers, including Indians, in the US, have lost their jobs due to the series of recent layoffs at companies like Google, Microsoft and Amazon.

    According to The Washington Post, nearly 200,000 IT workers have been laid off since November last year.

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

    When a non-immigrant worker’s employment is terminated, either voluntarily or involuntarily, they typically may take one of the four actions, if eligible, to remain in a period of authorised stay in the United States, the USCIS said.

    Prominent among these include filing an application for a change of non-immigrant status and filing an application for adjustment of status.

    They can also file an application for a “compelling circumstances” employment authorisation document or be the beneficiary of a non-frivolous petition to change employer, the USCIS said.

    “If one of these actions occurs within the up to 60-day grace period, the nonimmigrant’s period of authorised stay in the US can exceed 60 days, even if they lose their previous non-immigrant status.

    “If the worker takes no action within the grace period, they and their dependents may then need to depart the United States within 60 days, or when their authorised validity period ends, whichever is shorter,” the USCIS said in its letter.

    It said that because the up to 60-day grace period is codified in the Department of Homeland Security regulations, extending it would require a regulatory change in compliance with the Administrative Procedure Act and could not be extended by USCIS through policy guidance.

    Fortunately, most individuals facing job loss already have several options to remain in the US, while continuing their job search past 60 days, the USCIS wrote.

    It said it recognises the contributions made to the United States by talented foreign-born workers, including in the STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) fields.

    “We will continue to monitor the technology sector layoffs and explore appropriate measures,” Jaddou said.

    In a statement, Kand said departing the US after layoffs has an immediate impact on the families of the laid-off H1B and their school-going children.

    “Losing these professionals is also a brain drain impacting the future competitiveness of the US in emerging technologies. Hence, FIIDS has launched a multi-phase campaign from awareness building to jointly written letters to the USCIS with elected officials and other prominent organisations,” the statement said.

    FIIDS launched a media campaign in January to raise awareness about the issue.

    In February, it launched a petition which received support from various prominent organisations like the US-India Strategic Partnership Forum, US-India Business Council, American Jewish Committee, and The Indus Entrepreneurs seeking an extension of the grace period.

    “We appreciate the USCIS for clearly providing options for the laid-off H-1Bs. These official communications will improve the possibility for the H-1B holders to remain legally in the US. We will still work with the DHS to change the grace period,” Kand said.

    House of Representatives members Zoe Lofgren and Anna Eshoo, in their letter to USCIS, termed the departure of STEM professionals from the US a national security threat.

    Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi said that if retained, these laid-off professionals can develop innovative products and potentially start new businesses and create new jobs while advancing research across critical industries.

    Recently, Senator Chuck Schumer told an Indian American audience that the issue can be addressed with a procedure change.

    The “White House Initiative on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders” under the Health and Human Services Department also recommended an extension of the H-1B grace period.

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    #Wrong #assume #sacked #H1B #staffers #leave #America #days #USCIS #director

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • It’s wrong: Ghulam Nabi Azad on Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification

    It’s wrong: Ghulam Nabi Azad on Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification

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    Kathua: Democratic Progressive Azad Party (DPAP) chairman Ghulam Nabi Azad on Sunday termed Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification from the Lok Sabha a “wrong thing” and does not bode well for democracy.

    Gandhi was on Thursday sentenced to two years in jail by a Surat court in a 2019 criminal defamation case over his “why all thieves have Modi surname” remark. He was later disqualified from the Lok Sabha from the date of his conviction in the case.

    “I am against this, whether he is Rahul Gandhi or Lalu Prasad Yadav or any other MP or MLA. It is against natural justice that on one side a judge delivered a judgement and on the other the MP or MLA is disqualified,” Azad told reporters on the sidelines of a function in Kathua district.

    It is a wrong thing, he said.

    “Earlier, the rule was that he or she won’t be disqualified till the last court does not award him punishment. There are 20 steps before reaching the last court. This does not go well with the democracy,” the former Congress leader said.

    “Earlier Lalu Prasad Yadav was disqualified and now Rahul Gandhi. This way, the entire parliament and assemblies will become vacant,” he said, adding, “There should be a separate yardstick for political leaders.”

    Raising the pitch against the BJP over Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification from Lok Sabha, Congress leaders and workers held protests across the country on Sunday, with party president Mallikarjun Kharge and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra accusing the government of “trying to silence” a “martyr’s son” for raising the voice of people.

    The BJP, however, slammed the Congress and asked if it was agitating against the country’s Constitution or the law under which Rahul Gandhi was convicted or to justify his remarks against the entire backward community of the country.

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    #wrong #Ghulam #Nabi #Azad #Rahul #Gandhis #disqualification

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • What the hell is wrong with TikTok? 

    What the hell is wrong with TikTok? 

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    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    Western governments are ticked off with TikTok. The Chinese-owned app loved by teenagers around the world is facing allegations of facilitating espionage, failing to protect personal data, and even of corrupting young minds.

    Governments in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand and across Europe have moved to ban the use of TikTok on officials’ phones in recent months. If hawks get their way, the app could face further restrictions. The White House has demanded that ByteDance, TikTok’s Chinese parent company, sell the app or face an outright ban in the U.S.

    But do the allegations stack up? Security officials have given few details about why they are moving against TikTok. That may be due to sensitivity around matters of national security, or it may simply indicate that there’s not much substance behind the bluster.

    TikTok’s Chief Executive Officer Shou Zi Chew will be questioned in the U.S. Congress on Thursday and can expect politicians from all sides of the spectrum to probe him on TikTok’s dangers. Here are some of the themes they may pick up on: 

    1. Chinese access to TikTok data

    Perhaps the most pressing concern is around the Chinese government’s potential access to troves of data from TikTok’s millions of users. 

    Western security officials have warned that ByteDance could be subject to China’s national security legislation, particularly the 2017 National Security Law that requires Chinese companies to “support, assist and cooperate” with national intelligence efforts. This law is a blank check for Chinese spy agencies, they say.

    TikTok’s user data could also be accessed by the company’s hundreds of Chinese engineers and operations staff, any one of whom could be working for the state, Western officials say. In December 2022, some ByteDance employees in China and the U.S. targeted journalists at Western media outlets using the app (and were later fired). 

    EU institutions banned their staff from having TikTok on their work phones last month. An internal email sent to staff of the European Data Protection Supervisor, seen by POLITICO, said the move aimed “to reduce the exposure of the Commission from cyberattacks because this application is collecting so much data on mobile devices that could be used to stage an attack on the Commission.” 

    And the Irish Data Protection Commission, TikTok’s lead privacy regulator in the EU, is set to decide in the next few months if the company unlawfully transferred European users’ data to China. 

    Skeptics of the security argument say that the Chinese government could simply buy troves of user data from little-regulated brokers. American social media companies like Twitter have had their own problems preserving users’ data from the prying eyes of foreign governments, they note. 

    TikTok says it has never given data to the Chinese government and would decline if asked to do so. Strictly speaking, ByteDance is incorporated in the Cayman Islands, which TikTok argues would shield it from legal obligations to assist Chinese agencies. ByteDance is owned 20 percent by its founders and Chinese investors, 60 percent by global investors, and 20 percent by employees. 

    h 56251958
    There’s little hope to completely stop European data from going to China | Alex Plavevski/EPA

    The company has unveiled two separate plans to safeguard data. In the U.S., Project Texas is a $1.5 billion plan to build a wall between the U.S. subsidiary and its Chinese owners. The €1.2 billion European version, named Project Clover, would move most of TikTok’s European data onto servers in Europe.

    Nevertheless, TikTok’s chief European lobbyist Theo Bertram also said in March that it would be “practically extremely difficult” to completely stop European data from going to China.

    2. A way in for Chinese spies

    If Chinese agencies can’t access TikTok’s data legally, they can just go in through the back door, Western officials allege. China’s cyber-spies are among the best in the world, and their job will be made easier if datasets or digital infrastructure are housed in their home territory.

    Dutch intelligence agencies have advised government officials to uninstall apps from countries waging an “offensive cyber program” against the Netherlands — including China, but also Russia, Iran and North Korea.

    Critics of the cyber espionage argument refer to a 2021 study by the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab, which found that the app did not exhibit the “overtly malicious behavior” that would be expected of spyware. Still, the director of the lab said researchers lacked information on what happens to TikTok data held in China.

    TikTok’s Project Texas and Project Clover include steps to assuage fears of cyber espionage, as well as legal data access. The EU plan would give a European security provider (still to be determined) the power to audit cybersecurity policies and data controls, and to restrict access to some employees. Bertram said this provider could speak with European security agencies and regulators “without us [TikTok] being involved, to give confidence that there’s nothing to hide.” 

    Bertram also said the company was looking to hire more engineers outside China. 

    3. Privacy rights

    Critics of TikTok have accused the app of mass data collection, particularly in the U.S., where there are no general federal privacy rights for citizens.

    In jurisdictions that do have strict privacy laws, TikTok faces widespread allegations of failing to comply with them.

    The company is being investigated in Ireland, the U.K. and Canada over its handling of underage users’ data. Watchdogs in the Netherlands, Italy and France have also investigated its privacy practices around personalized advertising and for failing to limit children’s access to its platform. 

    TikTok has denied accusations leveled in some of the reports and argued that U.S. tech companies are collecting the same large amount of data. Meta, Amazon and others have also been given large fines for violating Europeans’ privacy.

    4. Psychological operations

    Perhaps the most serious accusation, and certainly the most legally novel one, is that TikTok is part of an all-encompassing Chinese civilizational struggle against the West. Its role: to spread disinformation and stultifying content in young Western minds, sowing division and apathy.

    Earlier this month, the director of the U.S. National Security Agency warned that Chinese control of TikTok’s algorithm could allow the government to carry out influence operations among Western populations. TikTok says it has around 300 million active users in Europe and the U.S. The app ranked as the most downloaded in 2022.

    GettyImages 1227810469
    A woman watches a video of Egyptian influencer Haneen Hossam | Khaled Desouki/AFP via Getty Images

    Reports emerged in 2019 suggesting that TikTok was censoring pro-LGBTQ content and videos mentioning Tiananmen Square. ByteDance has also been accused of pushing inane time-wasting videos to Western children, in contrast to the wholesome educational content served on its Chinese app Douyin.

    Besides accusations of deliberate “influence operations,” TikTok has also been criticized for failing to protect children from addiction to its app, dangerous viral challenges, and disinformation. The French regulator said last week that the app was still in the “very early stages” of content moderation. TikTok’s Italian headquarters was raided this week by the consumer protection regulator with the help of Italian law enforcement to investigate how the company protects children from viral challenges.

    Researchers at Citizen Lab said that TikTok doesn’t enforce obvious censorship. Other critics of this argument have pointed out that Western-owned platforms have also been manipulated by foreign countries, such as Russia’s campaign on Facebook to influence the 2016 U.S. elections. 

    TikTok says it has adapted its content moderation since 2019 and regularly releases a transparency report about what it removes. The company has also touted a “transparency center” that opened in the U.S. in July 2020 and one in Ireland in 2022. It has also said it will comply with new EU content moderation rules, the Digital Services Act, which will request that platforms give access to regulators and researchers to their algorithms and data.

    Additional reporting by Laura Kayali in Paris, Sue Allan in Ottawa, Brendan Bordelon in Washington, D.C., and Josh Sisco in San Francisco.



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    #hell #wrong #TikTok
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • What does SVB’s collapse mean for other banks? Here’s what else might go wrong — and what to expect next.

    What does SVB’s collapse mean for other banks? Here’s what else might go wrong — and what to expect next.

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    Is it necessary that regional banks continue to exist? Why or why not?

    This is a fantastic question. The U.S. has nearly 5,000 banks (and another 5,000 or so credit unions). That’s a lot of competition. Part of what’s strange though is a lot of that is a vestige of when we used to have restrictions on banking across state lines. So consolidation is perhaps understandable.

    You don’t want too much concentration in the megabanks (think JPMorgan Chase or Bank of America, which each have more than $3 trillion in assets, compared to SVB, which had roughly $200 billion). And regional banks like SVB are probably better able to compete with those banks than the little guys. But there’s certainly room to debate whether we don’t need as many banks as we have now.

    — Victoria Guida, POLITICO economics reporter covering the Federal Reserve, the Treasury Department and the broader economy

    What regulations are being discussed, and what is the probability that any of these regulations will see the light of day? At this point, what is the likelihood that the SVB collapse is a contagion?

    At this stage it’s extremely unlikely lawmakers would agree on a bill that would lead to any substantial changes — like Warren and Porter’s rollback of the Dodd-Frank rollback — that would make it across the finish line. Not enough Dems support it and it’s a divided Congress.

    On the other hand, there are definitely signs that bank regulators are looking at things like capital requirements and better supervision. On the latter, one of the issues that’s been raised is that regulators didn’t spot the problems with SVB’s investment portfolio/depositor concentration. Fed Vice Chair Michael Barr is overseeing a review of that as we speak.

    — Sam Sutton, POLITICO financial services reporter covering fintech and digital currencies

    Do you think the decision to protect depositors, but not investors, is indicative of a new policy direction, or is this just a one-off due to the nature of SVB’s customer composition (an overwhelming number of large-ish employers)?

    The legal answer to this is that there’s not a new policy. What actually happened is that the Fed, FDIC and Treasury invoked a “systemic risk exception” to the requirement that the FDIC try to minimize losses to its deposit insurance fund. That requires there to be some sort of threat to the financial system or the broader economy. (As an aside, the agencies haven’t really laid out their full justification for that, but the central reason seems to have been staving off financial panic.)

    It might be hard to keep suggesting that every bank poses that kind of risk! And of course, that’s not what Congress has said — the deposit insurance limit is set at $250,000. That said, this could spur a change in deposit insurance law sometime in the future.

    But the answer is actually more complicated than that. The Fed also unveiled an emergency lending program that, for the time being, will allow banks to put up the type of collateral that SVB dumped for cash loans that will help them meet withdrawal requests. So for now, the government has basically facilitated banks being able to handle more panicky behavior by depositors (although it depends on whether they have enough of the right type of assets). And that’s sort of an indirect backing of depositors for now!

    — Victoria

    Why was $1.8 billion in bond losses enough to make the bank insolvent? Where had all the deposits from clients gone that they couldn’t handle the bank run?

    It had less to do with the losses than it did the depositors’ reaction to those losses. Remember this bank was pretty concentrated: Venture’s a big deal but it’s also a little bit of a small world. So when word got out that SVB was taking steps to repair its investment portfolio, depositors — startup founders, VCs, etc. — fled en masse. $42 billion gone in a day, which likely would’ve been more if CA regulators and FDIC didn’t step in. Hard to survive that kind of run.

    — Sam

    Are we expecting a chain reaction of more banks collapsing due to the global nature of panic these days?

    The Fed has intervened to insulate open banks against liquidity concerns related to the open banks. Preventing a contagion likely played a role in invoking these systemic risk authorities for banks that are otherwise not central to the financial system. Crisis-fighters largely lost their authorities after the 2008 financial crisis to protect individual banks from contagion without first closing them. So, responding forcefully to these relatively insignificant banks’ failures hopefully limits contagion to any banks that may actually be more prone to spreading financial wildfire.

    The other thing worth noting is that this has primarily been a run on one kind of business model — banking tech/VC/Silicon Valley — which itself is facing belt-tightening as the Fed has raised interest rates steeply. We have not seen signs of contagion to large, diversified banks, which are actually experiencing deposit inflows.

    — Steven Kelly, Senior Research Associate at the Program on Financial Stability at Yale University

    How do you think this alters the FOMC’s plans for tightening? Do you think they have moved too fast? What else might break that they didn’t anticipate?

    It will definitely be a major factor in how the Fed is thinking about what to do next on interest rates. Inflation is still high — 6 percent over the past year — but it’s steadily dropped since the middle of last year. That said, it’s shown signs the last couple of months of mostly moving sideways rather than moving convincingly down.

    All of that to say, this is a tricky place for the Fed. What we saw with the banks was an example of how rate moves can suddenly hit, with a delay, in unpredictable ways. And so they have to be worried about going too fast and breaking something else. But they might still do a small increase later this month because they’re still worried about inflation. It’s about risk management at this point.

    — Victoria

    Does this mark the beginning of the end for bank deregulation legislation that is framed as “right sized or tailored regulation”?

    Unlikely. Tailoring as a broad and general concept is something that seems pretty logical: A community bank with less than $1 billion in assets that mostly does just basic lending shouldn’t face the same type of regulations as a megabank with $3 trillion in assets. How exactly that all shakes out is very complicated (and, as you implicitly suggest, offers a lot of room for mischief). But certainly, this has likely made both lawmakers and regulators much less sympathetic to arguments from banks — say, between $100 billion and $250 billion in size — that they don’t pose risks to the economy.

    — Victoria

    Was it really all that “shocking”? Seemed pretty expected something would happen with all the interest rate hikes, no?

    Indeed, financial distress was definitely an expected outcome of the Fed’s interest rate hikes. They very explicitly wanted to tighten financial conditions — and banks are a huge part of the financial sector. The Fed is (awkwardly?) also in charge of bank supervision — i.e. making sure banks are resilient. And it has a financial stability mandate. It seems the Fed wants tighter financial conditions, but only outside the core banking system.

    — Steven

    What are SVB’s assets? Does the depositor’s refund come from bank reserves or the FDIC?

    SVB’s assets are largely longer-term Treasuries and government-backed mortgage securities. These securities have little risk of loss if they’re held to maturity, but they lost paper value as interest rates increased. So when SVB lost deposits and had to sell assets, they had to bear those losses.

    While depositors have immediate access to their funds — which may need to be funded in the short-term by the FDIC — the FDIC will only lose money if its sale of the assets (and/or liabilities) of SVB is less than enough to cover all the depositors. And, if the FDIC’s insurance fund dips below what it determines to be sufficient coverage for the system, it will levy the banking system for the shortcoming.

    — Steven

    What is the reason that Pacwest Bancorp has been hit hard during this? Their financials seem to suggest little doubts about liquidity.

    Liquidity and capital regulations are helpful against general downside banking risks. They can do little if the market bails on your business model. PacWest’s business looks very similar to SVB’s even if their balance sheet looks stronger. Being a bank to tech/Silicon Valley doesn’t look like a viable business model in this interest rate environment – hence the counterparty run. When your counterparties run as a bank, you’re out of business. No amount of capital or liquidity can save you.

    — Steven

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    #SVBs #collapse #banks #Heres #wrong #expect
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Aptech Trending For Wrong Reasons In JK

    Aptech Trending For Wrong Reasons In JK

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    SRINAGAR: Aptech is trending for all wrong reasons on social media, with various sections of society criticizing LG- Led administrations move of selecting the blacklisted Aptech for conducting Jammu and Kashmir Services Selection Board (JKSSB) exams.

    Many political parties expressed their displeasure over the selection of Aptech company for conducting JKSSB exams.

    The selected APTECH company is blacklisted by many states including Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan and has also been penalized by the Supreme Court as the said company has failed to uphold integrity of the process of exam conduction.

    Taking to micro blogging site Twitter, Azad Democratic Progressive Party (DPAP) Chief Spokesman, Salman Nizami, criticized the move, saying that APTECH has failed to ensure transparency and accountability in conducting such exercises in the past, which is why many states have banned it.

    “Awarding a contract to blacklisted Aptech by JKSSB seems a deep rooted conspiracy to spoil the future of J&K’s youth. The contract should be withdrawn immediately & in future never to engage with such companies,” Nizami said.

    Lending his support to the JKSSB aspirants on Twitter , Co- founder Study IQ,  one of India’s leading Ed-tech startup, Dr Gaurav Garg said, “Why is a blacklisted company like Aptech given the mandate in the first place? Why is the administration playing with the future of the youth of Jammu and Kashmir? Everyone must support the JKSSB aspirants.”

    He added, “There are many companies like TCS which have done a great job in organising exams in India of the scale of IBPS. Why such companies are ignored by JKSSB and a criminal and corrupt blacklisted company like Aptech is given the mandate.”

    After the KVS TGT scam was unearthed in Leh, PDP Chief Mehbooba Mufti wrote on her twitter that there has been no end  to scams since 2019.

    “Despite court directions, blacklisted companies continue conducting these shambolic recruitment exams. Its the students who are paying a huge price while the culprits are given a free run. This has been happening since 2019 & there seems to be no end to it,” she noted.

    State Spokesperson of Jammu and Kashmir National Conference Imran Nabi Dar tweeted “JKSSB is the enfant terrible of the incumbent JK administration. The board inspite of addressing the genuine concerns and fear of the educated, skilled local youth seems hell bent to destroy their future by continuously persisting with a block listed company like APTECH.”

    Cautioning JKSSB over the murky past of JKSSB ,  Peoples Confrence President,Sajad Lone said, “ I have received a lot of emails and messages about APTECH which has been blacklisted in other states Given the shoddy track record of past, SSRB better tread with caution. Students need to be heard. You can’t thrust a black listed company on our future.”

    Meanwhile, various JKSSB aspirants have expressed their anguish over the move and have appealed to LG administration to look into the matter and remove “tainted” APTECH and hire a more credible organistion to conduct exams smoothly.

     

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    #Aptech #Trending #Wrong #Reasons

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Mehbooba Mufti Is Right And Wrong At The Same Time, Says Soz

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    SRINAGAR: Former Union Minister and Senior Congress leader Saifuddin Soz has spoken out on the recent appeal made by PDP President, Mehbooba Mufti, to Kashmiri Muslims to protect Kashmiri Pandits from getting killed. Soz expressed puzzlement when he read about the appeal in the newspapers, but also agreed with Mufti that killing in Kashmir can never be an acceptable situation.

    “Ms. Mehbooba Mufti is right as killing in Kashmir, under no circumstances, can be an acceptable situation for the general run of the people of Kashmir, who have experienced death and destruction in Kashmir, over a long period of 30 years! I am one amongst the Kashmiris who reject the culture of violence, altogether.” Soz said.

    Soz emphasized that he is one amongst the Kashmiris who rejects the culture of violence altogether. However, he also stated that appealing to the people of Kashmir is not enough to yield any advantage, and instead proposed organizing a strong public reaction against the killings through non-violent and peaceful methods.

    “But, Ms. Mehbooba Mufti is wrong in the sense that appealing to people of Kashmir is not going to yield any advantage. I am prepared to join Mehbooba ji to organize a strong public reaction against these killings through non-violent and peaceful methods.” he added.

    “What can the people of Kashmir do beyond feeling sad and helpless on the deaths of civilians at the hands of killers, who always try to remain hidden from the public eye?” he concluded.

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    #Mehbooba #Mufti #Wrong #Time #Soz

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Siddaramaiah charges Karnataka CM  of presenting wrong info to hide BJP’s corruption

    Siddaramaiah charges Karnataka CM  of presenting wrong info to hide BJP’s corruption

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    Bengaluru: Senior Congress leader Siddaramaiah on Friday accused Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai of using the Justice H S Kempanna Commission’s report to give wrong information in the Assembly regarding the Arkavathy Layout denotification.

    The Leader of Opposition in the Karnataka Assembly said the Chief Minister was acting with an intention to “hide” the corruption charges against the BJP government.

    He was reacting to Bommai, who on Thursday in the Assembly, reading out the excerpts from the Justice Kempanna Commission’s report which is not in public, had accused the previous Congress government of “redo” or denotifiation of Arkavathy Layout land.

    “When I was not present in the Assembly, Bommai shouted and created an impression that there was a big scam worth Rs 8,000 crore. The Kempanna Commission has said that I did not denotify even one gunta of land. Bommai is speaking plain lies,” Siddaramaiah told reporters here. One gunta is equal to 1,089 square feet.

    He noted that Arkavathy Layout was formed in 2003, and before his government came to power, 2,750 acres were notified.

    “Later, final notification was done for 1,919.13 acres. This was challenged in High Court and went to the Supreme Court, which fixed some parameters and teams were formed to delete some lands when B S Yediyurappa was the chief minister,” Siddaramaiah added.

    The file next went to Jagadish Shettar who subsequently became the Chief Minister, but by then the model code of conduct for the election was in place, so it was sent back, he said.

    “When our (Congress) government came, there was a petition in the High Court because of which there was some pressure.”

    “As our officers had stated that everything was done as per the Supreme Court’s parameters. I approved it. It was not a redo, but a remodified scheme,” Siddaramaiah further said.

    Subsequently as Shettar, who was then Leader of Opposition, and others alleged that there was a scam, he had formed a judicial commission for an inquiry, the Congress leader contended.

    Pointing out that in September 2021, the HC constituted another committee under retired Justice K N Keshavanarayana, Siddaramaiah said: “Hearing a PIL that sought for tabling of the Justice Kempanna Commission’s report, the High Court had said it can’t be considered in view of the Keshavanarayana committee that’s functioning. Hence, it was wrong to speak on a report that was not tabled.”

    With the ruling BJP accusing him of weakening the Lokayukta by forming the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB), Siddaramaiah also sought to defend his government’s decision to constitute the new state agency.

    “Gujarat, Goa, Assam, Madhya Pradesh and 12 other states have Lokayukta and ACB. Why isn’t the BJP abolishing ACB in these states?” he asked.

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    #Siddaramaiah #charges #Karnataka #presenting #wrong #info #hide #BJPs #corruption

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Dining across the divide: ‘I think it’s an oversimplification to say the British empire was all wrong’

    Dining across the divide: ‘I think it’s an oversimplification to say the British empire was all wrong’

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    Oliver

    Oliver, 54, Birmingham

    Occupation Natural language processing engineer

    Voting record Oliver, who now has dual German/British nationality, has yet to vote in a general election in this country. He’s a member of the Green party and describes himself as: “Not a Corbynista, but left of Starmer.” In Germany, he voted for the Social Democratic party.

    Amuse bouche When visiting Madame Tussauds, Oliver was mistaken for a waxwork. “Someone came up to me and looked for a label, then got a bit of a shock when I moved.”

    Peter

    Peter, 58, Birmingham

    Occupation Software engineer; also runs an alternative clothing company

    Voting record Has voted for all three main parties, and the Monster Raving Loony party. In the next general election he’ll probably vote Labour, “on the basis that the Conservatives are inept”.

    Amuse bouche Peter has 11 children (three acquired by marriage), ranging in age from 19 to 42, and 11 grandchildren. “Names I can manage; birthdays, I have to keep a calendar.”

    For starters

    Peter We did a bit of small chat – what do you do, where are you from? He seemed quiet and reserved, but as soon as we started talking he relaxed. It was funny we were both in software.

    Oliver It was Indian street food, really nice. We shared starters – aubergine fritters and onion bhajis – then I had a dosa and he had grilled chicken.

    Peter and Oliver

    The big beef

    Peter The royal family was a clear area of disagreement. For me, it’s a positive. I like the tradition, the consistency, the fact that even though they don’t have direct executive power I’m sure they influence politicians. They are good diplomats and bring in tourist business.

    Oliver I’m a republican – the monarchy should be abolished. I don’t believe someone should be in a position of power by accident of birth. The Queen was very popular and probably did a reasonable job, but if you had someone totally unhinged as king or queen, there’s nothing you could do. Andrew is still eighth in the line of succession – if the others fell under a bus, would the royalists be happy with that?

    Peter I don’t think an elected head of state would work well – look at Trump.

    Oliver In Germany, the two chambers of parliament appoint a group to elect the president. You don’t get extremists because compromise is involved.

    Peter and Oliver

    Sharing plate

    Oliver He’s against Brexit, otherwise we would have had a screaming match. Leaving the EU has caused so many problems – it’s a no-brainer to be part of the biggest trade and political union.

    Peter I started with an open mind, but nobody could give me a reason for doing it that actually stood up to scrutiny. And it’s been an absolute car crash.

    Oliver My suspicion is that Russia had a hand in Brexit: splitting us off from the rest of Europe can only be of interest to someone like Putin. My parents don’t visit us any more because they don’t have passports.

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    Peter It was based on misleading populism. My clothing business was crashed by Brexit. I’m 100% against it.

    Peter (left) and Oliver

    For afters

    Oliver I feel that all ex-imperial countries – pretty much every country in Europe – have done horrendous things and they should apologise.

    Peter I would apologise if I – not my ancestors – had done something wrong. The idea that Britain should apologise for something that happened 200 or 300 years ago doesn’t compute.

    Oliver I feel strongly about this from a German perspective. I’m not responsible for the Holocaust – I was born 30 years after it happened. I am responsible for making sure it doesn’t happen again. I think Britain is very bad at dealing with its past. In Germany, some people say it’s going too far – digging out everything that went wrong and feeling guilty about it – but if you don’t, things will just get repeated.

    Peter I think it’s an oversimplification to say the empire was all wrong and we are all evil scum. Those countries benefited as well. We took our system of law into the world and the world is a better place for it.

    Peter (left) and Oliver

    Takeaways

    Oliver It was mostly details we disagreed on. It was interesting to talk about things you wouldn’t normally talk about with someone you don’t know. We got on well – we are both tolerant.

    Peter I get involved in online discussions, but they tend to be shouting: “You’re wrong.” So, I really enjoyed the chance to kick ideas around with someone who was intelligent and well read and prepared to argue his point.

    Peter (left) and Oliver

    Additional reporting: Kitty Drake

    Oliver and Peter ate at Zindiya in Birmingham.

    Want to meet someone from across the divide? Find out how to take part

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • UP: Woman dies after being administered ‘wrong’ injection by quack

    UP: Woman dies after being administered ‘wrong’ injection by quack

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    Bhadohi: A 48-year-old woman died allegedly after being administered a “wrong” injection by a quack in this district, police said on Sunday.

    The accused has been arrested by the police.

    According to the police, the woman died on Friday allegedly after she was administered a wrong injection in a clinic in Semradh area that comes under the Koirauna police station limits.

    Citing the complaint lodged by the victim’s family members, Station House Officer (SHO) Brijesh Kumar Maurya said Patti Devi (48), who was taken to Rajan Vishwakarma, the alleged quack, died after she was administered an injection.

    The body was sent for post-mortem.

    Based on the complaint, police lodged an FIR under sections of the Indian Penal Code and arrested the accused on Sunday. “The accused failed to produce any medical degree before police,” the SHO said.

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    #Woman #dies #administered #wrong #injection #quack

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Biden on robust jobs numbers: The ‘critics and cynics are wrong’

    Biden on robust jobs numbers: The ‘critics and cynics are wrong’

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    The president’s last-minute remarks were added to his schedule Friday morning after the Labor Department announced the U.S. economy created a whopping 517,000 jobs in January, a shockingly high number that underscores a growing and resilient labor market. The unemployment rate fell to 3.4 percent, the lowest level since 1969.

    Biden cheered the report as evidence the economy has bounced back after the pandemic — and that economics’ predictions of an incoming recession are overblown. The data also arms the White House with another line of defense against Republicans’ attacks over the Biden administration’s spending policies.

    And the timing doesn’t hurt either, with the president set to deliver his State of the Union address before Congress next week. “But today, today I’m happy to report that the state of the union and the state of the economy is strong.”

    The president’s public remarks were more giddy than West Wing reactions behind closed doors, as officials had hoped for a less-robust figure. Inflation continues to plague the economy, and Friday’s numbers mean Fed Chair Jerome Powell will have to blunt growth in order to curb prices. Powell is concerned that a hot jobs market will drive high wages, further fueling inflation.

    But asked whether he should take blame for inflation rates, Biden was definitive: “No, because it was already there when I got here.” He noted that when he took office, “jobs were hemorrhaging, the inflation was rising, and we were not manufacturing a damn thing here, and we were in real difficulty.”

    In December, inflation continued to steadily trickle down to 6.5 percent, falling from the Consumer Price Index’s June peak at 9.1 percent. Powell is working to get inflation down to the central bank’s target range of 2 percent, and the Fed raised interest rates by a quarter of a percent on Wednesday — the eighth straight increase.

    He warned on Wednesday that more rate hikes were coming, noting that “the job is not fully done.”

    Ben White contributed to this report.

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    #Biden #robust #jobs #numbers #critics #cynics #wrong
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )