Category: Union Territory

  • Government enhances rate of stipend for Handicrafts and Handloom trainees in J&K

    Jammu: In a significant and major development, Government of Jammu & Kashmir Thursday enhanced the rate of stipend for trainees undergoing Elementary and Advanced level training courses in various training centres of Handicrafts and Handloom departments.

    The monthly stipend in Handicrafts sector has been enhanced from Rs. 500/- to Rs. 1000/- for Elementary course and from Rs. 700/- to Rs. 1500/- for Advanced Training Course. Similarly, in respect of Handloom Training Courses, the rate of monthly stipend has been increased from Rs. 500/- to Rs. 1000/- for Ready-Made Garments (RMG) and Weaving Training Courses.

    The enhancement in stipend was long overdue after it was found that the meagre stipends in this sector was failing to attract artisans to pursue craft activity as their profession. The enhancement will not only encourage target groups to this vocation but will also encourage the school drop outs to join the training centres in order to learn skills for securing their future.

    The move by the Government is seen to infuse a fresh lease of enthusiasm and motivation among the trainees. Close to 13000 artisans and weavers of Jammu and Kashmir in different crafts of Handicrafts and Handloom sector shall be benefited by this enhancement.

    It will further increase competition among the youth to seek skill training in training centers of the department and will encourage the traditional artisans and weavers to seek full time capacity building training, thereby helping them to become self reliant.

    In the long run, the training imparted would help artisans and weavers to produce more diversified products and become familiar with new ideas, motifs and designs after getting acquainted with new trends in their trades. The decision of the Government to approve revision of stipend rates has been widely appreciated by the trainees and fulfills their long pending demand. This revision in the stipend has taken place after a long gap of 8 years.

    Hailing the decision of the Government, Manoj Kumar Dwivedi, Commissioner/Secretary to the Government Industries and Commerce Department said that the endeavour of this government has all along been to improve the financial and socio-economic conditions of the artisans and weavers associated with various crafts and would enable unemployed youth to start their own ventures and become job providers rather than job seekers.

    Currently there are 369 & 179 Elementary and Advanced Training Centres in the Handicrafts sector and 99 Ready-Made Garments, Weaving and Kani centres in the Handloom sector of Jammu and Kashmir providing training to unemployed youth in different trades/crafts. The enhancement in the stipend comes days after the Government conferred Padma and State Awards to Ghulam Rasool Khan and Sajad Hussain Dar in recognition of their role played in the promotion of Kashmir Handicrafts.

    The enhancement in the stipend has been welcomed and termed as historic by the Apex trade bodies like KCCI, FCIK and PHD Chamber of Commerce. Appreciating the LG Administration, various associations concerned with the Kashmir Craft including TAHAFUZ have expressed their gratitude for taking this momentous decision to improve the lot of artisans.

    The enhancement in the stipend has been also welcomed by various Associations of Handicrafts and Handloom of Jammu Division, especially by Jan Shakti Handicrafts Union Jammu & Jammu Province Handloom Cooperative Societies Federation, who have expressed their gratitude towards the momentous decision taken.

    This revision in the stipend has taken place after a long gap of 8 years. (KINS)

  • Hard to beat Covid-19 without vaccinating children: Dr. Nisar ul Hassan

    Srinagar: With no Covid-19 vaccine for kids yet, Dr. Nisar on Thursday said it is hard to beat the pandemic without vaccinating children.
    “We won’t be able to defeat Covid-19 until children are vaccinated,” said influenza expert Dr Nisar ul Hassan in a statement to news agency KINS.

    “The most realistic way to achieve herd immunity is through wide-scale vaccination,” he said.

    “Herd immunity is achieved when most of the population in a community is immune to the disease so that the virus can no longer spread easily from person to person.”

    “In order to achieve herd immunity to Covid-19, 80-90 percent people need to be vaccinated,” the doctor said.

    “That is unlikely to be achieved if children who constitute a huge proportion of the population are unvaccinated.”

    “There are around 4.8 million kids in Jammu and Kashmir who cannot be vaccinated,” he said.

    “And, if we leave a large number of the population unimmunized, we will not be able to break the chain of infection and pandemic will linger on.”

    “Covid-19 vaccine is required for children to return to classrooms and is important for ensuring safe learning environment in schools,” Dr Nisar said.

    “Children can get infected at school and spread the virus to parents and grandparents at home who are more likely to develop severe disease. Children can also transmit the virus to teachers and other staff at school.”

    “We saw more adults being affected by Covid-19, but children are certainly not immune,” he said.

    “While most children who get Covid-19 infection develop mild illness, several hundreds have died of respiratory failure or an inflammatory syndrome.”

    “It is unjust to allow kids to take on great burdens during the pandemic but not give them the opportunity to benefit from a vaccine,” said Dr Nisar.

    “A pediatric vaccine would not only help children, but it will be the basis of eventually eliminating Covid-19 in our population.”

    “While the trials of Covid-19 vaccine for children have started, kids may have to wait for few more months before they will be included in vaccination schedules,” he said. (KINS)

  • MET Predicts “Harsh Weather Alert” for coming weekend

    Minimum temperature to dip further and Snow, Rain likely in J&K, Ladakh on Feb 2-3

    Severe cold wave continues unabated in Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh on Thursday as the meteorological (MET) office forecast another spell of snow and rain on February 2 and 3.

    “Dry weather is likely to continue in J&K and Ladakh till January 31 after which we are expecting a spell of snow and rain of light intensity on February 2 and 3.

    “Improvement in both minimum and maximum temperatures is expected after January 31,” an official of the MET department said.

    The ongoing 40-day long of harsh winter cold the ‘Chillai Kalan’ will also end on January 31.

    Srinagar recorded minus 5.6 degrees Celsius as the minimum temperature on the day while it was minus 12.3 in Pahalgam and minus 13.4 in Gulmarg.

    Leh town of Ladakh had minus 16.8, Kargil minus 21.3 and Drass 28.1 as the night’s lowest temperature.

    Jammu city had 6.2, Katra 6, Batote 0.5, Bannihal minus 2.2 and Bhaderwah minus 2 as the minimum temperature.

  • Soldier killed, 3 others injured in IED blast at Kulgam

    Srinagar: A soldier was killed three others sustained injuries in an IED explosion at Subhanpora, Shamsipora in South Kashmir’s Kulgam district, officials said.

    They said that an IED was planted inside a school in Subhanpora locality of Shamsipora on Srinagar-Jammu highway in Kulgam. Today’s IED explosion is first in year 2021, as per security officials.

    Officials said that one among the four injured army men succumbed to his injuries at Army’s 92 base hospital in Srinagar.

    Earlier, four army men of an ROP of 24 RR were injured after an IED went off when they passed by a school in Subhanpora area of Kulgam.

    They added that the school building also got damaged due to the IED blast that was planted inside the building. Later, a massive manhunt was launched to trace the militants
    Meanwhile, Srinagar based defence spokesperson Col. Rajesh Kalia in a statement said that militants lobbed a grenade on Army’s Road Opening Party during the sanitization drill at around 10:15 am today in Shamshipura area of Khanabal in Kulgam district. He said that four soldiers sustained splinter injuries.

    A police statement said that at 10:15 am, Kulgam Police received information about an incident at Government Middle School Subhanpora area of Kulgam where an IED blast took place. Senior police officers reached the site of incident.

    Preliminary investigation revealed that a rudimentary IED with a low powered explosive and ball bearings was planted in an abandoned building inside the school premises, where the army jawans used to visit on routine basis. “The IED was planted by militants probably during the night hours. In this incident, four soldiers of 24RR sustained injuries and were evacuated to nearby hospital for the treatment of their injuries. Among the injured one soldier jawan succumbed to his injuries. We pay our rich tributes to the martyr for his supreme sacrifice made in the line of duty,” the police statement said.

    It further said that a case FIR No. 05/2021 under relevant sections of law has been registered in Police Station Qaimoh. “Investigation is in progress and officers continue to work to establish the full circumstances of this terror crime. Area has been cordoned and search in the area is going on,” the statement said.(KINS)

  • ‘Govt may restore 4G internet services in more districts’, Decision after assessing situation, say officials


    Srinagar: Based on a considered and wide-ranging assessment of the prevailing situation, the government may restore 4G Internet services in more districts in the Union territory of Jammu and Kashmir, KINS has learnt.

    Highly placed sources told news agency KINS that the review by top authorities will be carried out and if there is an improvement in the security situation appropriate action will be taken accordingly.

    “We are assessing the situation. We may open it (4G) in more districts as and when we deem it appropriate, given the level of peace we have in the province,” said a top source in the administration wishing not to be named.
    One of the top officials said that as a measure of precaution, they are not opening 4G services even when they were aware that there is already peace in most of the districts.

    Since the ban on 4G, the government has been maintaining that these security measures such as the internet ban were necessary to better integrate the region with India, foster greater economic development and stop threats from “anti-national elements”.

    Interestingly Jammu and Kashmir’s Lieutenant Governor, Manoj Sinha, recently had  gave hints on restoration of high speed 4G internet services in the remaining eighteen districts of the Union Territory (UT) soon.

    “I know 4G is working in just two districts of J&K. There is a committee examining the issue. Hopefully, there will be good news soon in the coming days,” he had said while replying a question at a press conference in winter capital Jammu.

    Last week, the Private Schools Association of Jammu and Kashmir representing 3,800 institutions, filed a fresh affidavit seeking the ease of restrictions on the internet. It said that children in J&K were losing academic years because it’s impossible to conduct online classes using video-conferencing tools such as Zoom or WebEx at 2G mobile Internet speed.

    The Jammu and Kashmir administration recently extended the suspension of internet till February 6, saying the services will continue to be restricted to 2G. The ban was extended to all districts except Ganderbal and Udhampur districts.

    In an order, the administration also said Internet connectivity shall be continued to be made available, with Mac-binding.

    Principal Secretary to the Union Territory administration Shaleen Kabra had said that he was satisfied with the reports of law enforcement agencies that it was necessary to extend the ban “in the interest of the sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the state and for maintaining public order.”

    According to the order, the law enforcement agencies’ reports indicated that the suspension had helped thwart plans of militant organisations operating in the Union Territory to “misguide, incite and provoke the youth in furthering their anti-India agenda since regulation of high speed internet mobile internet prevents easy streaming/dissemination/downloading of such material/videos”.

    Meanwhile sources told KINS that the administration is taking action against those who are spreading rumours.

    “We have taken action against some people who have scripted wrong stories and rumours. Police have already been tasked to collect details of all such people who are participating in spreading wrong information, “said the source.

    It is to mention here that the J&K administration restored 4G services in Udhampur and Ganderbal districts on a trial basis on August 16 last year, but refused to extend high-speed mobile internet beyond these precincts citing inputs from security agencies about “terror modules trying to lure youths into militant organizations.”

    The services was restored in Ganderbal and Udhampur districts of the Union Territory and it was for the first time when high speed internet services returned to the region after restrictions were clamped following abrogation of Article 370 and bifurcation of the erstwhile state into two union territories last year on August 5.

    The restoration of 4G services was done on the recommendation of a panel constituted by the Supreme Court of India to review the restrictions vis-à-vis the security situation in the Union Territory.

    The decision was in line with Centre’s assurance to the Supreme Court that the 4G ban will be lifted in one district each in Jammu and Kashmir divisions from August 16 last year.(KINS)

  • Reopening of Schools in a staggered from February 8th and March 1st 2021

    Sgr Admin gears up to aware teachers, students on COVID SOPs; Launches month-long safety awareness programme

    Srinagar: Days after the government decided to re-open schools after the passage of nearly one year, the district administration Srinagar has geared up and started making students as well as the teachers aware regarding Standard Operating Procedures (SOP).

    According to the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), a special programme-cum-awareness meeting was held on Monday at Banquet Hall Srinagar regarding the opening of schools in district Srinagar.

    The awareness program was presided over by Deputy Commissioner (DC) Srinagar, Dr. Shahid Iqbal Choudhary along side with Additional Deputy Commissioner (ADC) Srinagar Dr. Syed Haneef Balkhi.

    A presentation was given by GMC Community Science department, regarding the COVID-19 SOPs and guidelines, which needs to be followed in schools.

    Pertinently, the government had ordered re-opening of schools in a staggered manner for academic activities from February 8th and March 1st 2021 respectively. All the education al institutions including Schools, Colleges and Universities remained closed from March last year in wake of the COVID-19 outbreak, which claimed around 2,000 lives in Jammu and Kashmir so far.

    Meanwhile, Deputy Commissioner Srinagar Dr. Shahid Iqbal Choudhary while speaking to the media said, “Before opening the schools, we have launched a one month long COVID-19 safety awareness programme for educational institutions, where a special training and certification programme will be given to teachers, safety and hygiene support will be given by district administration and teachers have to connect a good bond with parents for which teachers will be trained.”

    “In Srinagar, we have around 1000 Schools, which include both Private and Government schools. The district administration will frame the ‘School Safety Plan’, under which interactions will be held with both parents and students,” he said.

    Dr Salim HOD Community Medicine while speaking to KNO, said, “We gave the presentation about the basic hygiene, physical distancing and other COVID-19 SOPs, which needs to be followed during the opening of schools.”

    Those who attended the meeting include Chief Education Officer (CEO) Education, RTO Kashmir, all Zonal Education Officers (ZEO) and Heads of Institutions—(KNO)

  • Soz terms Sajad Lone’s decision of pulling out from PAGD a ‘correct’ one

    Srinagar: Senior Congress leader and former Union Minister Saifuddin Soz Monday said that Sajad Lone pulled out from Peoples’ Alliance for Gupkar Declaration (PAGD) to keep the identity of his Peoples Conference Party intact.

    File Photo | Photo Credit: PTI

    “Sajad Lone took a correct decision for his party. Every political party is unique with separate identity. I think Sajad Lone pulled out from PAGD to keep the identity of his party intact,” Soz told News Agency Kashmir News Trust.

    Pertinently, People’s Conference led by Sajad Lone pulled out of the alliance recently citing the fielding of proxy candidates in the District Development Council (DDC) polls as a reason.

    Lone, however, said his party was not “divorcing” from the objectives of the PAGD. “We will continue to adhere to the objectives that we set out when this alliance was made. And the PAGD leadership should be assured that we will extend support on all issues which fall within the ambit of stated objectives,” he said. “We have issued clear instructions to all party leaders not to issue any statements against the PAGD or its leaders”.

    Prof. Saifuddin Soz said that every party in Kashmir has its own identity and every party be it NC, PDP or some other party want people should identify their party separately. “Sajad Lone did the same. He pulled out from the Alliance in the interest of his party,” Soz said. (KNT)

  • Jammu and Kashmir to have more non-local Officers Serving: Retired Bureaucrat

    Kashmir was on the boil in August 2008. Protests had erupted over the transfer of 99 acres of forest land to the Amarnath Shrine Board, which managed a popular Hindu pilgrimage site in the Valley. In response, groups in Jammu had blocked the highway to Kashmir, choking off supplies to the region.

    To protest the economic blockade, on August 11, over two lakh people marched through North Kashmir’s Baramulla district towards the Line of Control with Pakistan. The security forces opened fire on them, killing five protesters, including a leader of the Hurriyat Conference, Sheikh Abdul Aziz.

    As the news came in, Latief U Zaman Deva, the district magistrate of Kulgam in South Kashmir, summoned local officers from security agencies like the army and the police. He told them curfew was being imposed in Kulgam, much like the rest of Kashmir, “but with the direction that you will not use force in case it is breached”.

    Deva, who hailed from neighbouring Anantnag district, understood the need to handle the situation carefully. He decided not to forcibly restrict people from protesting peacefully against Aziz’s killing the next day. “I allowed people to take out processions, assemble in Jamia Masjid Kulgam, deliver speeches, etc,” he recalled.

    Instead of the security forces manning sensitive locations in Kulgam, civilian officers and friendly residents were deployed to guard public properties and keep the peace. Deva stayed in touch with prominent local leaders through the day.

    “The net result was that despite protests and marches, nothing untoward happened in Kulgam,” said Deva, now retired from the Jammu and Kashmir cadre of the Indian Administrative Service. In the rest of the erstwhile state, 15 protesters were killed in firing by police and paramilitary forces that day.

    No more J&K cadre

    On January 7, the Union government promulgated an ordinance enabling the merger of the Jammu and Kashmir cadre of the All India Service officers with the AGMUT cadre. AGMUT stands for Arunachal Pradesh, Goa, Mizoram and Union Territories.

    The All India Services include the Indian Administrative Service, the Indian Police Service and the Indian Forest Service. While most appointments to these services are made centrally through examinations held by the Union Public Service Commission, the selected officers can pick the state cadres they wish to belong to. An officer assigned to the Tamil Nadu cadre, for instance, will spend most of their career working within the state.

    Like other states in India, the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir had its own cadre for the All India Services. Given its special constitutional status, however, only 50% of its All India Service officers were direct recruits chosen through the UPSC exams. The other half came from Kashmir Administrative Service officers who were promoted into the All India Services. In other states, 67% of the officers are direct recruits while only 33% are officers inducted from the state services.

    When Jammu and Kashmir lost its special status on August 5, 2019, it also became subject to the 67:33 rule, reducing the number of positions available for Kashmir Administrative Service officers.

    Now, with the Jammu and Kashmir cadre itself being merged into the AGMUT cadre, which represents three states and eight Union Territories, the presence of Kashmiris in key bureaucratic positions within the Valley stands to erode further.

    “It means the officers from across the AGMUT cadre can be posted at any point of time in Jammu and Kashmir,” explained Mohammad Shafi Pandit, the first Kashmiri Muslim to clear the Indian Administrative Service examinations in 1969.

    More often than not, Kashmiris who cleared the UPSC exams, like the former bureaucrat-turned-politician Shah Faesal, chose the Jammu and Kashmir cadre. This ensured Kashmiri presence even among the 50% of direct recruits into the All India Services in the erstwhile state. But this will change, since Kashmiris who opt for the AGMUT cadre may not be posted in their home region.

    “Now, the government has a larger pool from which they can choose officers to serve in Jammu and Kashmir,” said a retired bureaucrat from Kashmir, who requested anonymity. “Put simply, Jammu and Kashmir will have more non-local officers serving here.”

    The local factor

    There is already disquiet over Kashmiris disappearing from the top ranks of government, as Scroll.in reported previously. The Union Territory administration is currently led by lieutenant governor Manoj Sinha, a Bharatiya Janata Party politician from Uttar Pradesh, and his advisors, none of whom is from the Kashmir Valley. A change in the composition of the civil services will only deepen the disquiet, said former bureaucrats.

    Mohammad Shafi Pandit, who went on to become the chief secretary of Jammu and Kashmir before he retired in 2009, said most governments understood the need for the presence of local officers at the higher levels of governance. “In a sensitive place like Jammu and Kashmir, which has had problems all along from 1947, it has always been necessary to have somebody who can comport with the local people and understand their problems,” he said.

    Governments even strove to ensure “balance was always maintained both in Jammu and Kashmir”, he added. “Suppose in Kashmir, if you had one Muslim officer at the top, you would have one non-Muslim officer at other top rank as well… Those considerations seem to have lost relevance all together now.”

    Even though many Kashmiris view civil servants with suspicion, indifference, even hostility, local officials stood a better chance of handling difficult situations, said former officials. They were able to forge informal relationships with key leaders. There are numerous instances when such relationships were put to use in favour of the government.

    Former deputy inspector general of Jammu and Kashmir police, Ali Mohammad Watali, offered an example from his tenure as the police superintendent of Baramulla district.

    “It was long before the militancy erupted,” recalled 88-year-old Watali. A religious leader had given a call to shut down the only liquor shop in Sopore town. “When I came to know about it, I went to Sopore and talked to people. I found a lot of support for the call.”

    Before the chorus for shutting down the liquor shop in the volatile area could gain steam, Watali did the unexpected: he locked up the shop himself. “There was an uproar from many in the government [who asked] how could I do it. I told them it is my discretion and since its shutting down is in the interest of law and order, I decided to lock it down.”

    While he had diffused a potentially volatile issue from spiraling into a larger crisis in his jurisdiction, the trouble was far from over. The leader was quick to extend his call to shut down all liquor shops in Kashmir valley. The next day, he led a massive procession in Sopore, gathering outside the police station to court arrest with his followers.

    Watali told the leader since he had not committed any crime, he could not arrest him. “Since I knew him well, he whispered in my ear, requesting me to take him into custody as it won’t look good before his supporters,” the former police officer recalled.

    But Watali wanted to go by the procedure under law – he told the leader that if he blocked the main road and brought transport to a halt, it could be registered as a crime. “You won’t believe it,” he said. “That’s exactly what he did and we arrested him.”

    At the police station, Watali offered him tea and counselled him before letting him go. “I told him it doesn’t befit a tall leader like him to talk about small issues like alcohol ban and all.” That was the end of the anti-liquor protests.

    “We restored peace by personal influence,” said Watali. “The personal influence depends on your relationship with the people and that can only happen if you are a local.”

    The need for such interventions grew in the post-militancy years, said former civil servants.

    Away from home

    Another implication of the merger of the Jammu and Kashmir cadre into the AGMUT cadre is that Kashmiris who clear the All India Services Exams now have reduced chances of getting an opportunity to serve within their home region. “Even if Kashmir Administrative Service officers are inducted into the IAS, it will mean that they too will have to serve in different parts of the country other than Jammu and Kashmir,” said the retired bureaucrat.

    This aspect could weigh on the minds of future civil service aspirants in Jammu and Kashmir, said Rouf Ahmad. The young man from Ganderbal district had made a bid for the Kashmir Administrative Services in 2016, but did not qualify.

    With inputs from Scroll.in

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

  • Bird Flu Outbreak: Govt Issues 10-Point Guide to Eating Eggs, Chicken Safely

    Srinagar: The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, has issued a list of do’s and don’ts for eating eggs and chicken. This comes after several states including Delhi and Mumbai confirmed the outbreak of avian influenza in crows, migratory/wild birds and even poultry birds.

    Poultry sales have gone down sharply due to the bird flu outbreak and many people are avoiding eating chicken or eggs at all.

    However, it is said to be okay to eat chicken meat or eggs if they are cooked properly. The World Health Organisation (WHO) also said that proper cooking inactivates the virus present inside meat and eggs.

    This 10-point guide aims to create awareness among regular consumers of eggs and poultry. The FSSAI said that meat and eggs from the areas affected with the H5N8 bird flu outbreak in poultry should not be consumed raw or even partially cooked.

    Temperature is key. The virus is destroyed at 70 C if held for about three seconds, the document by FSSAI noted. Properly cooking meat or eggs to achieve a temperature of 74 degrees Celsius in eggs or all parts of meat will most likely inactivate the virus.

    Here are the 10 precautionary measures released by FSSAI on its official website:

    • Do not eat half-boiled eggs
    • Do not eat undercooked chicken
    • Avoid direct contact with birds in the infected areas
    • Avoid touching dead birds with bare hands
    • Do not keep raw meat in open
    • No direct contact with raw meat
    • Use a mask and gloves at the time of handling raw chicken
    • Wash hands frequently
    • Maintain the cleanliness of surroundings
    • Eat chicken, eggs and their products after cooking. (PTK)
  • Police arrests 02 drug peddlers in Budgam, contraband substance recovered

    Srinagar: Police in its recent action against drug dealings in Budgam have arrested two drug peddlers and recovered contraband substance from their possession.
    A police spokesperson in a statement to news agency KINS says that officers from Police Station Khanshab at a checkpoint established at Parnewa Bugroo intercepted two persons identified as Zahid Ahmed Tantray resident of Wagar Khanshab and Nisar Ahmed Gojri resident of Pazaan Chadoora. “During checking, officers were able to recover 200 grams of charas like substance from their possession. They have been arrested and shifted to PS where they remain in custody,” the statement said.
    Accordingly, a case vide FIR No.05/2021 under relevant sections of law have been registered at Police Station Khanshab and investigation has been taken up.
    “Community members are requested to come forward with any information regarding drug peddlers in their neighbourhood. Persons found indulging in drug peddling will be dealt as per law,” it reads.
     “Our consistent actions against drug peddlers should reassure the community members that we are making efforts to keep our society free from the scourge of drug menace as reiterated in our community meetings,” the statement reads. (KINS)