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  • J&K should be bridge of peace between India, Pakistan and China: Mehbooba Mufti

    ‘Our battle is for restoration of special status’

    Srinagar: People’s Democratic Party (PDP) President Mehbooba Mufti on Tuesday said that Jammu and Kashmir should act as a bridge of peace between India, Pakistan and China.

    Speaking to reporters as per news agency KINS, the former J&K chief minister said that the PDP’s agenda has always been that J&K acts as a ‘bridge of peace’ between India and its neighbouring countries. She said her late father Mufti Mohammad Sayeed’s dream of making J&K as a bridge between New Delhi, Islamabad and Beijing needs to be fulfilled.

    The PDP chief, who has vociferously opposed the scrapping or Article 370, said that earlier all laws were made in consultation with the public, but now laws are being imposed on Kashmiris which are against their existence and we won’t tolerate it. “Our battle is for restoration of special status of Jammu and Kashmir,” she said.

    Recently she stoked a controversy saying that PDP would not hoist the Tricolour unless her party is allowed to raise the flag of Jammu and Kashmir also. Her comments didn’t go down well with three of her party leaders. Three senior PDP leaders resigned to protest against party president’s stand on the Tricolour.

    Mainstream political parties of Jammu and Kashmir, including National Conference, PDP, People’s Conference, Communist Party of India (Marxist) have joined hands to form Peoples Alliance for Gupkar Declaration (PAGD) to restore Article 370. While NC leader Farooq Abdullah is the president of PAGD, Mufti is the vice-chairperson, CPM leader M Y Tarigami has been appointed as the convenor and Lok Sabha member from south Kashmir Hasnain Masoodi has been elected as the coordinator. (KINS)

  • ‘Decision to reopen Colleges, Universities to be taken only after Govt issues new guidelines’

    Srinagar: Amid speculations about reopening of Colleges and Universities in Jammu and Kashmir, the authorities on Tuesday said the decision to reopen the educational institutes will be taken only after the government issues new guidelines.

    Top official of the Higher Education Department told the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that it has not received any intimation by the government regarding the reopening of Colleges and Universities so far.

    “As of now, we have not got any intimation with regard to reopening of Colleges and Universities from the government,” the official said.

    The official further informed KNO, “Until the government will issue any new guidelines, we cannot take any decision as to whether we will reopen the institutions or continue with online mode.”

    “The colleges however are open for research, guidance and counsel even the students are visiting the college to collect the notes and study material and the regular class work has not been started yet,” the official said.

    Pertinently, the University of Kashmir (KU) in October said the academic activities of the ongoing academic session will continue even during the winter vacations in order to compensate the academic losses due to outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic.

    Earlier in September, the University Grants Commission (UGC) ordered Universities and Colleges to commence classes for the new academic session 2020-21 from November-01 for first year Undergraduate and Postgraduate students.

    UGC also directed the Universities and Colleges to complete the admission process by October-31—(KNO)

  • Gupkar Declaration meant for ‘thrusting’ decisions on common people: Brig Anil Gupta

    Jammu: BJP J&K spokesperson Brigadier Anil Gupta on Tuesday hit out to parties of Gupkar Declaration, saying the group is meant for thrusting decisions of handful of political parties to common masses.

    Talking exclusively to Kashmir News Service (KNS), BJP leader while hitting out to regional political parties including NC, PDP and others said they want to continue ‘Khandani Raj’ in J&K and for that matter Gupkar Declaration is meant for the purpose. “Gupkar Declaration is meant for continuing Khandani Raj in UT while these parties are thrusting their decisions upon common people”, he said.

    About election, Gupta said that it is the job of Election Commissioner who can take a call. “We are politicians and can’t decide when elections are conducted. Right now delimitation process across UT is underway and till its completion, there seems no headway to elections”, Gupta added.

    He said Government of Jammu and Kashmir has decided to conduct DDC elections which will be a reason for strengthening democracy at grass root level.

    Gupta condemned the comments of French President Emmanuel Macron about Prophet Muhammad (SAW) and said what he did, was condemned one and all.

    “BJP has denounced the remarks of French President. His remarks hurt the sentiments of Muslims across the globe. Same Hindus living in Bangladesh are being harassed but nobody has shown any concern”, he said.

    Lashing out on Congress party, Gupta said that Rahul Gandhi has been silenced over persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh. “Congress is playing double game and didn’t utter a sympathy with Hindus being harassed outside India”, he said.

    “When there was agitation on CAA in country, Congress took undue advantage of the situation and endorsed its support in fanning trouble. But when Hindus outside country are being harassed the party is keeping silence”, BJP spokesperson said.

    Gupta added that all human beings are brother to each other. “Our forefathers are same. Our blood is red. We can’t be divided on the basis of religion. If people are practicing their respective religions that is their personal choice”, he said adding till all humans will not live together, humanity can’t prosper and develop. (KNS)

  • J&K’s unemployment rate reaches 25%, double than national average

    Srinagar: In a major concern, the unemployment rate has reached to 25 percent in Jammu and Kashmir, which is double the national average.

    Jammu and Kashmir has 65 percent population under the age of 35 years. While as per official figures accessed by news agency Kashmir Indepth News Service (KINS), 25 percent youth are unemployed in J&K, which is double the national average.

    “We are facing many challenges. Unemployment is a major concern in J&K. For a single post, thousands of aspirants are applying,” an official told KINS.

    To curb on unemployment, the official Jammu and Kashmir administration has set up 2025 its target to create employment opportunities and end unemployment in the new Union Territory.

    The official said that J&K government has sought support of the national-level investors and industry experts in creating robust infrastructure and employment avenues for the youth of J&K.

    Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha has also said government would take measures to end unemployment in J&K.

    “I believe in concrete plans and immediate execution. My idea of Institutional Mechanism under Mission Youth is to ensure that we have a concrete framework and a definite time-line to execute it on the fertile ground that we have prepared,” he recently said.

    The Lt Governor also beckoned the industrial leaders to partner J&K in formulating and implementing the programme successfully on ground as he assumed that best designs are not what looks good on paper but what works best when implemented on ground.

    In the domestic Ease of Doing Business ranking and State Reform Action Plan he said, “We are moving up. By minimizing regulatory burdens, J&K have scored over states like Kerala and Odisha in September’s ranking by the central government.”

    He has urged that ways and means should be searched for providing the sustained support to youth as the piecemeal approach has not done any good in the past. Our youth has struggled due to many reasons as lack of avenues regarding job prospects, skill up gradation, recreation abetted by poor educational standards, skill sets are taking toll on them, he added. (KINS)

  • PDP fought many battles in past, will fight more for J&K, its people: Mehbooba Mufti

    Srinagar: PDP chief Mehbooba Mufti on Tuesday said that party had fought battles against surrendered militants & POTA and right now it will fight for restoration of Article 370 and resolution of Kashmir issue from the front.
    According to Kashmir News Service (KNS), Mehbooba was talking to reporters after meeting with several youth came from several parts of valley.

    “I met several youth today who apprised me about political and economical situation of their respective areas. What I observed New Delhi has devastated the structure of Jammu and Kashmir by their anti-Kashmir and anti-people policies”, Mehbooba said.

    She said that after Article 370 was abolished by Modi led BJP Government last year, Central Government didn’t stop its brutalities here but resorted to more “anti-people” policies like introducing Domicile Law, amendment in Land Laws & employment rules and others.

    Mehbooba claimed that PDP had fought several battles in past and will continue to fight more for the interests of Jammu and Kashmir and its people.

    “PDP had fought battles against surrendered militant, POTA & others, and today our fight is for restoration of identity of Jammu and Kashmir that was snatched by New Delhi on August 5, 2019 forcibly”, she said adding resolution of Kashmir issue is inclusive in our fight. (KNS)

  • Hot or cold weather may have no significant effect on COVID-19 spread: Study

    PTI

    Houston: Temperature and humidity do not play a significant role in the spread of the novel coronavirus, that causes COVID-19, according to a study led by an Indian-origin researcher in the US.

    The study, published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, suggests that the transmission of COVID-19 from one person to the next depends almost entirely on human behaviour, irrespective of hot or cold weather.

    The researchers noted that weather influences the environment in which the coronavirus must survive before infecting a new host.

    However, it also influences human behaviour, which moves the virus from one host to another, they said.

    “The effect of weather is low and other features such as mobility have more impact than weather. In terms of relative importance, weather is one of the last parameters,” said Dev Niyogi, a professor at the University of Texas (UT) at Austin, US, who led the research.

    The study defined weather as “equivalent air temperature,” which combines temperature and humidity into a single value.

    The scientists then analysed how this value tracked with coronavirus spread in different areas from March to July 2020, with their scale ranging from US. states and counties, to countries, regions and the world at large.

    At the county and state scale, the researchers also investigated the relationship between coronavirus infection and human behaviour, using cellphone data to study travel habits.

    The study examined human behaviour in a general sense and did not attempt to connect it to how the weather may have influenced it.

    At each scale, the researchers adjusted their analyses so that population differences did not skew results. Across scales, the scientists found that the weather had nearly no influence.

    The researchers compared the weather with other factors using a statistical metric that breaks down the relative contribution of each factor towards a particular outcome.

    They found that the weather’s relative importance at the county scale was less than 3 per cent, with no indication that a specific type of weather promoted spread over another.

    In contrast, the data showed the clear influence of human behaviour — and the outsized influence of individual behaviours, according to the researchers.

    Taking trips and spending time away from home were the top two contributing factors to COVID-19 growth, with a relative importance of about 34 per cent and 26 per cent respectively, they said.

    The researchers noted that the next two important factors were population and urban density, with a relative importance of about 23 per cent and 13 per cent respectively.

    “We shouldn’t think of the problem as something driven by weather and climate. We should take personal precautions, be aware of the factors in urban exposure,” said study co-author Sajad Jamshidi, a research assistant at Purdue University in the US.

    Maryam Baniasad, a doctoral candidate at Ohio State University, US said that assumptions about how coronavirus would respond with weather are largely informed by studies conducted in laboratory settings on related viruses.

    Baniasad said that this study illustrates the importance of studies that analyse how the coronavirus spreads through human communities.

    “When you study something in lab, it’s a supervised environment. It’s hard to scale up to society. This was our first motivation to do a more broad study,” she added.


    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Gunmen kill at least 25 students at Kabul University

    Taliban says that their fighters did not cause the assualt

    Kabul: Gunmen killed at least 25 students in Afghanistan’s Kabul University on Monday, AFP reported.

    An injured person being taken to a hospital after a suicide attack on a religious gathering at a wedding hall in Kabul, Afghanistan, where a thousand people were said to be present.Credit…Mohammad Ismail/Reuters

    According to the witnesses and government sources, gunmen opened fire on students in the capital of Afghanistan, while they attempted to flee the scene.

    A witness told Reuters that the gunmen were firing at every student they saw.

    Hospital workers carry an injured person after an attack in Kabul, Afghanistan March 6, 2020.
    (Photo Credit: OMAR SOBHANI / REUTERS)

    “They were shooting at every student they saw,” Fathullah Moradi told Reuters, while adding that he was able to escape through one of the gates of the university with his friends.

    The Taliban claimed that their fighters did not cause the assault, with no other group taking responsibility of the act so far.

    According to witnesses, soon after the attack, an explosion took place in the area.

    A man wounded after gunmen stormed the university on Monday. Photo Credit: Wakil Kohsar/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

    “At least 10 killed many others wounded,” the senior government official told Reuters.

    According to the Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman Tariq Arian, many attacked had infiltrated the campus and were fighting with security forces.

    A police source told Reuters that at least 15 people had been injured in the event.

    NATO’s Senior Civilian Representative to Afghanistan Stefano Pontecorvo condemned the assault in a statement.

    “This is the second attack on educational institutions in Kabul in 10 days. Afghan children & youth need to feel safe going to school,” he claimed.

    Last month, an attack on an education centre had killed 24 people, most of whom were students.

    Afghanistan government and Taliban negotiators are meeting in Qatar to reach a peace deal, while the United States brings its troops back.

  • KK Sharma to represent J&K in delimitation panel

    Srinagar: Jammu & Kashmir’s State Election Commissioner, Kewal Kumar Sharma would replace Hirdesh Kumar as member of the delimitation commission constituted by the Central government earlier this year for Assembly and Parliamentary segments of J&K Union Territory, sources disclosed.

    Highly placed sources in J&K government told news agency- Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that Sharma would now be part of the three-member delimitation commission headed by former Supreme Court Judge Justice (Retd) Ranjana Prakash Desai.

    The Election Commissioner Sushil Kumar Chandra is other member of the panel.

    Constituted in March this year, the panel is mandated to fix boundaries of 90 Assembly segments of J&K and reserve seats for schedule castes and scheduled tribes within them.

    It has also been empowered to undertake delimitation of five parliamentary segments of J&K UT.

    The Commission has been constituted under J&K Reorganization Act,2019 and Delimitation Commission Act, 2002.

    Sharma, who was an advisor to J&K LG, resigned last week after his appointment as first full-fledged SEC.

    It is worthwhile to mention here that Sharma, a 1983-batch Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer of the Arunachal Pradesh, Goa and Mizoram Union Territories (AGMUT) cadre, was appointed advisor to the Lieutenant Governor in November last year.

    During his service career spanning some 30 years, he has held key positions, including the Chief Secretary of Delhi and Goa.

    He also served as secretary in the Human Resource Development Ministry before his retirement. Sharma has served as advisor to the administrator of Chandigarh too—(KNO)

  • Covid-19 Claims 9 More Lives, J&K Toll 1493

    Srinagar: Jammu and Kashmir reported nine more covid-19 deaths in last 24 hours, taking the fatality count to 1493.

    Among those who succumbed to the virus include six residents of Kashmir Valley while three others belonged to the Jammu region.

    Officials told GNS that two among the victims from Kashmir Valley were from Srinagar while one each was from Baramulla, Pulwama, Ganderbal and Kulgam respectively.

    They said that the Ganderbal resident was 70-year-old man from Kangan and died at SKIMS Soura, 11 days after he was admitted to the tertiary care hospital.

    The victim from Baramulla, they said, was a woman from Sopore area who died at the hospital, 12 days after she was admitted.

    One among other victims from Valley was a 63-year-old man from Shaheed Gunj and died at CD Hospital, one among the exclusive facilities for the management of the covid-19 patients in the Valley.

    Regarding deaths from Jammu, they said, one each victim belonged to the J&K’s winter capital, Ramban and Kishtwar.

    With these deaths, the fatality count has reached 1493 in J&K—993 in Valley and 500 in the Jammu region.

    Srinagar district with 360 deaths tops the list followed by Jammu (259), Baramulla (146), Budgam (94), Pulwama (83), Kupwara (73), Anantnag (74), Rajouri (47), Kulgam (46), Bandipora(47), Doda (46), Shopian (35), Ganderbal (34), Udhampur (32), Kathua (31), Samba (25), Poonch (23), Kishtwar(15), Ramban (14), and Reasi (8). (GNS)

  • Sajad Lone criticized admin after J&K ranks lowest on Governance among UTs

    Srinagar: People’s Conference (PC) Chairman Sajad Gani Lone Monday criticized Jammu and Kashmir administration after the newly carved out Union Territory ranked second last among the UTs in the Public Affairs Index-2020.

    According to Kashmir News Service (KNS), Lone while taking his twitter handlers said “What a pathetic mismatch between figures and non-stop blabbering about administrative performance. Must say though. They have religiously threatened to perform”.

    The data released by Public Affairs Centre under Public Affairs Index-2020 ranked Kerala the best governed State in the large States category while Uttar Pradesh ended at the bottom.

    The city-based not-for-profit organization, headed by former Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) chairman K. Kasturirangan, said in its annual report that the States were ranked on governance performance based on a composite index in the context of sustainable development. Four southern States — Kerala (1.388 PAI Index point), Tamil Nadu (0.912), Andhra Pradesh (0.531) and Karnataka (0.468) stood in the first four ranks in the large State category in terms of governance, it said.

    Chandigarh emerged at the top in the category of Union Territories with 1.05 PAI points, followed by Puducherry (0.52) and Lakshadweep (0.003). Dadar and Nagar Haveli (-0.69), Andaman, Jammu and Kashmir (-0.50) and Nicobar (-0.30) were the worst performers.

    Pertinently Central and UT (J&K) Governments on the first anniversary of abrogation of Article 370 and 35(A) asserted that newly formed Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir has performed well on all fronts since August 5, 2019.

    However the claims were contested by regional mainstream political parties, civil society, human rights bodies and others as well who repeatedly urged New Delhi to revoke the decisions taken on August 5 last year. (KNS)