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  • Achieving new heights: Anantnag girl making it big in global entrepreneurship

    GK News Network

    Moqierish Tak, Co-Founder of India Assist Insights Pvt Ltd hailing from south Kashmir’s Anatnag district is achieving new heights in country’s corporate sector. In an interview with Greater Kashmir, she discussed her innovative ideas and success story.

    Moqierish Tak, CO-Founder, India Assist

    Q… How did you step into this field and are you a first generation entrepreneur?

    Moqierish: Although I am not a first generation entrepreneur, I am one of those 1% that didn’t choose entrepreneurship, but entrepreneurship chose me. My mother is a self-created and established woman, but I was bestowed with an idea and a journey that gave me an opportunity to impact people’s lives. India Assist is a product that has the potential to make a huge impact, this alone was reason enough for me to leave my previous career and embark on the journey of entrepreneurship. Now that I have begun this journey, I do not see myself being anything else but an entrepreneur. Regardless of how difficult the journey is, I would choose entrepreneurship over a corporate career every time.

    Q…What is the nature of your business and how did it come into existence?

    Moqierish: India Assist is a start-up revolutionizing the way people travel, specifically working on improving travel experience of foreigners visiting India. It is an on-call solution providing ‘Assistance & Distress Management’ service to the foreign tourists. Our core product offering is the assistance and distress management service via a subscription-based phone app. We provide help to travelers in India which includes verified information and personalized assistance through our on-ground team in medical emergencies, theft, loss, altercation and transit.

    The model of our product is on-ground assistance and human interface and we offer assistance by allocating personnel to the tourist at their live location. We are also constantly working with our teams to ensure they are compassionate and their moto is to “Help First” and ensure the subscriber is put at ease and comforted. The idea was conceived by the founder of India Assist Harish Khatri when he identified a serious gap in the current travel and tourism landscape, that of security and active assistance. Together we founded India Assist to bridge the gap created by lack of a centralized system that could provide foreigners in India with a platform that provides verified information and trusted assistance.

    Q… Tell us about your early days and what inspired you to start a venture?

    Moqierish: I studied in Delhi throughout my schooling and undergraduate years. After graduating from Sanskriti School with Commerce background, I studied BA Mathematics Hons from Miranda House, Delhi University where alongside I pursued my passion in sports. My passion however took over my life decisions. During my first job at the Commonwealth Games Delhi 2010, I decided to pursue my further studies in sports. Thereafter, I graduated in MSc International Sports Management from Northumbria University in Newcastle, UK to initiate a full-fledged career in big ticket sports events. My love for sports made me realise that I would do anything to follow my passion and in doing so love every minute of hard work and energy put into building something I wanted. This was the epicentre of my inspiration. Once I got associated with India Assist it changed my outlook towards life. It was easy to leave behind my established career to start something new that I believed in.

    Q…What are your thoughts about women empowerment especially vis-a-vis Kashmir?

    Moqierish: I always believed that Kashmiri women are a force to reckon with. I have grown up watching and looking up to such remarkable women who have made their mark, with their undeniable resilience and strength, not just in society but in the world. In today’s day and age, we are seeing women stand up and move to the frontlines in business, politics, as well as all spectrums of public space. This is especially true in Kashmir, where strength is born with the women’s movement and consciousness. Women’s empowerment is valuable to me because not only does it allow women to take up space that is constantly denied to them, but also because it gives rise to love and solidarity amongst women.

    Q…Entrepreneurs in Kashmir continue to strive despite hurdles. What’s your mantra to success which you would like to share with them?

    Moqierish: My success mantra has always been ‘to dream it and do it’. Great leaders are innovative. They look at things differently, and they teach us to look at things differently. They are also energetic, they can see the whole picture, they have great foresight, and they understand people and business. They are people with ethics, integrity, and honesty—and they’re decision-makers. One should learn how and when to say no and delegate. Enjoy what you are doing, and make sure you are having fun. And don’t be afraid to bring new ideas forward.

    Q… Kashmir is also a tourist hub and considering nature of your venture would your company ever be keen to have a presence here?

    Moqierish: Absolutely. We aim to cover all corners and parts of India. Kashmir has so much to offer in terms of tourism, and a product like ours once implemented with proper care and precision would help increase the tourist inflow into the Valley and boost the tourism based economy.

    Q….What are your key hobbies apart from work?

    Moqierish: I play basketball and other outdoor sports during the week. I enjoy an active personal, work and social lifestyle and intermediately take opportunities to roll back from technology and rejuvenate and work on myself. Reading during off time is a great way for me to keep the mind active. There is no better feeling than the one of constant growth.

    Q…What are your future business plans and how big do you see yourself making it in India’s corporate sector as a woman entrepreneur in next 5 years?

    Moqierish: Our near future business plans entail creating an eco-system for foreigners arriving in India and becoming a most reliable information and assistance platform for them while they travel within the country. They should be able to enjoy the better side of India and just in case they get into any distress, we are there to help them and make their trip stress-free.

    At micro level we want the states to adopt this model (UP Assist, Rajasthan Assist etc) and at a macro level we want to venture into other countries as well.

    In the next 5 years I see India Assist groomed and built into the next unicorn start-up from India, making path breaking advancements in the service industry through technology enabled solutions. Alongside, India Assist, I hope that I would have built myself and gathered enough knowledge and experience and still have courage to keep innovating and challenging myself.

    Q…Be a job creator and not a seeker.. How much do you believe in this?

    Moqierish: A job seeker means working for others dreams, being satisfied with what is given, following process instead of thoughts, not challenging self-capabilities enough and being taken care of rather taking care for others. But when you become job creator, you define many things. You create job opportunities for others. You bring innovation and try to make that innovation relevant to people and create an impact on community development. You bring economic integration of outsiders and create global environment and in a way enhance the standard of living for society at large.

    Job creator also promotes research and development which help mankind to be prepared for future challenges.

    The Interview was First Published on Greater Kashmir ‘Largest Circulated Daily of Jammu & Kashmir’

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

  • 4G-mobile internet will help in fighting spread of COVID-19 in J&K Altaf Bukhari

    Urges GoI to restore high speed internet for confined students, businessmen

    SRINAGAR, March 17: Jammu Kashmir Apni Party (JKAP) President Syed Mohammad Altaf Bukhari on Tuesday urged the union home minister to restore high speed mobile internet, one of the prerequisites, in taking up preventing measures against the spread of Coronavirus-19 in Jammu and Kashmir.

    In a statement issued here, Bukhari observed that restoration of 4G mobile internet services in Jammu and Kashmir would enable people especially the students to remain engaged inside their homes, thereby effectively containing the global pandemic COVID-19.

    JKAP president said that since all the educational institutes are closed in Jammu and Kashmir the students have been left with no option but to remain idle in their homes which has a telling impact on their future.

    He said that as COVID-19 spreads at an alarming rate, the public health officials have called for minimal public gatherings—which is pushing many activities online. “The issue is particularly severe for schools, where the risk of spreading the disease is high. As many J&K schools have shifted to online lesson plans, home restricted students are running into the limitations of mobile internet services, which leave most of them unable to connect to their new online classrooms or download lesson plans,” Bukhari remarked.

    He said that since all schools, colleges and universities are closed as a result of novel coronavirus outbreak, millions of students are missing classes, creating an ‘unparalleled’ education disruption in the region. “Earlier our students missed classes due to disruptions created by August 5, 2019 decisions and now the novel corona virus outbreak has posed a serious challenge to our children to cope up with their counterparts in the country who enjoy all other educational facilities including high speed mobile internet,” Bukhari said, while demanding immediate restoration of 4G mobile internet services in J&K.

    Similarly, the JKAP president opined that the business community and a large section of the people who are working in the private sector are unable to do their businesses or duties as usual.

    Bukhari expressed hope that the restoration of high speed mobile internet will go a long way in easing out the situation not only for the home confined youth in their pursuit of career advancement as also in their academic odyssey but for the business community and vast majority working in the private sector.

    “The tourism trade has also received a big hit in absence of high speed mobile internet services while businesses including tour and travel operators, chartered accounts, call centres, fresh start-ups and entrepreneurs have also suffered hugely,” he said, while urging the union home minister to order restoration of 4G mobile internet services in light of the recent Honb’le Supreme Court ruling.

  • Coronavirus: UAE suspends prayer in all houses of worship including mosques

    Gulf News

    Dubai: Prayers at mosques and all other places of worship in the UAE have been suspended as of 9pm on Monday as a precautionary measure against coronavirus.

    The National Emergency of Crisis and Disasters Management Authority and the General Authority of Islamic Affairs and Awqaf temporarily suspended prayers at mosques and places of worship in the country as of 9pm Monday for four weeks as a precautionary measure amid global COVID-19 outbreak.

    The decision to suspend prayers in mosques, chapels, places of worship and their facilities will be reviewed after four weeks from now.

    The decision is part of the precautionary and preventive measures taken by the UAE against coronavirus, COVID- 19, and based on the instructions of the Ministry of Health Prevention and the Fatwa of the Emirates Fatwa Council in coordination with the federal and local religious and health authorities.

    The UAE’s concerned authorities called on citizens, residents and visitors to comply with this announcement, which is in the interest of the people.

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

  • Taj Mahal closed, annual Shah Jahan Urs not to be held

    GK News Network

    Agra mayor Navin Jain had asked for closure of the monuments, in a letter to the union tourism minister, a fortnight ago.

    The annual three day Urs of Mughal emperor Shah Jahan, builder of the iconic Taj Mahal, will not be held, as scheduled from March 21, as the historic monuments including the Taj in the city have been shut down till March 31, in the wake of COVID-19.

    This will be the first time in the history of the Taj, that the annual Urs will not be held.

    During the three day Urs, entry remains free and a series of functions are organised. Work on the 365 metre long chadar, to be offered, had begun.

    A member of the organising committee said, the convention would indeed be disrupted, but the safety of the country was more important.

    The whole area around the Taj Mahal wears a deserted look. The Taj is visited by around 30,000 people daily. For the past one month there had been a steep decline.

    Agra mayor Navin Jain had asked for closure of the monuments, in a letter to the union tourism minister, a fortnight ago.

    The Agra Development Authority used to earn around Rs 14 crore daily from ticket sales.

    On Tuesday, a pall of gloom descended on the tourism sector, as guides, photographers, taxi drivers, hoteliers were left with no work.

    The once crowded parking areas were vehicle free. The eleven five star hotels and around 25 three star hotels, plus countless guest houses, dharamshalas and smaller hotels are waiting for customers. How long this wait will be, uncertainty continues.

    Only during the 1971 war with Pakistan, the Taj Mahal was closed for more than a week. During the flood in 1978, it was again closed for a couple of days.

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

  • 3 more tested positive in Ladakh UT

    Total positive cases in Ladakh is 6 now

    Spokesman Rigzin Sampheal: Total Six COVID19 cases in Ladakh after 3 more positive cases. UT spokesman Commissioner Secretary Rigzin Sampheal says 2 cases are from Leh, 1 from Kargil district.

  • Many Indian pilgrims in Iran test positive for COVID-19

    The Kashmir Monitor

    New Delhi/Tehran: A large number of Indian pilgrims in Iran have tested positive for coronavirus and will stay back for medical treatment in the country till they recover.

    The overall death toll crossed 700 and infections rose to around 25,000 across Iran on Sunday. Iran is one among the worst affected countries with most cases and fatalities from coronavirus, which originated in Wuhan city of China.

    Top official sources, without specifying any numbers, said that a considerable number of Indian pilgrims have tested positive in Iran.

    “The pilgrims are mostly in senior citizen age group and therefore vulnerable. Since they have tested positive, they will stay back, go through the medical treatment and quarantine as per the international standard protocol for coronavirus patients,” an official told IANS.

    There are over 6,000 Indian nationals in various provinces of Iran. Of them, there are about 1,100 pilgrims mainly from the union territories of Ladakh and Jammu and Kashmir and the state of Maharashtra and nearly 300 students primarily from the UT of Jammu and Kashmir. Around 1,000 fishermen from Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Gujarat and others stay in Iran earning their livelihood and for religious studies.

    As per a video recording accessed by IANS, Indian representatives are constantly meeting Indian nationals stranded in Iran. In one such meeting between Indian representatives and Kashmiri pilgrims in Iran, it was revealed that hotels are evicting pilgrims for overstaying and for not being able to pay their dues.

    The government said it is making arrangements for further evacuations as the test reports come. “Those who are testing negative are being evacuated by the government,” the official said. India has also sent trained medical teams have to Iran to help and treat Indian nationals.

    So far, the government has evacuated around 400 Indians including 53 who returned on Monday, from the Iranian cities of Tehran and Shiraz. Upon their arrival, they went through a preliminary screening at the airport in New Delhi and were then sent to the Army Wellness Centre in Rajasthan’s Jaisalmer.

    The news of their return to India was tweeted by external affairs minister S. Jaishankar on early Monday. “Fourth batch of 53 Indians — 52 students and a teacher — has arrived from Tehran and Shiraz, Iran. With this, a total of 389 Indians have returned to India from Iran,” Jaishankar tweeted.

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

  • Coronavirus outbreak: Saudi Arabia returnee tests positive in Jammu and Kashmir

    India Today

    person who had recently traveled to India from Saudi Arabia has tested positive for novel coronavirus. This is the third positive case in Jammu and Kashmir.

    “One more case confirmed positive. Travel history to Saudi Arabia. Had reported high viral load earlier. Total 3 positive cases now,” Rohit Kansal, Principal Secretary of Planning Development & Monitoring Department in Jammu and Kashmir administration informed via a tweet on Monday.

    Earlier in the day, the administration imposed Section 144 in Jammu and Kashmir’s Ganderbal district to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus pandemic.

    District Magistrate Shafqat Iqbal imposed the ban on the assembly of four or more people in any public place and it will remain in place till March-end, according to an order.

    The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the country rose to 114 on Monday, with Odisha reporting its first COVID-19 patient and a new case each in Ladakh, Jammu and Kashmir, and Kerala, according to the Union Health Ministry.

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

  • BJP Will Anyway Restore J&K Statehood, Need More: Soz

    Advises Farooq Abdullah To Seek Substitute For Article 370

    Srinagar | Congress leader and former union minister Prof Saifudin Soz Monday said that the challenge for J&K leadership was not the restoration of statehood but finding a substitute to the abrogated Article 370 of the constitution.

    “The crucial question is not the restoration of statehood which the BJP itself wants to happen, but, seeking, at least, a close substitute to the abrogated Article 370 of the Constitution of India,” Soz said in a statement to Kashmir Observer.

    “I rang up Dr. Farooq Abdullah”, Soz said adding I welcome his release and hope that he would realise, in full measure, his role at the present day Kashmir’s ‘cross road situation’.

    “As the people know, we have fallen to bad times. So, we must close our ranks and realise our joint responsibility for future”, he said.

    “The moot point for mainstream leadership of Kashmir is to ponder over why the Centre put the entire mainstream leadership either in jail or under house arrest since August 5, 2019, when it abrogated Article 370 of the Constitution of India, unilaterally”, Soz said.

    He said it was incumbent upon the mainstream leadership, particularly the National Conference, to adopt a mechanism to sort-out issues with the Centre so that “things don’t go awry in future”.

    “If the constitution of India offers accommodation to the resolution of Kashmir issue, then, the Union should take steps to revive the democratic process in Kashmir. It is only then that the electoral process can be undertaken at some point of time in future”.

    “It is the Centre that has to come clean on how the state’s constitutional relationship with the Union can be strengthened as a ‘Cooperative and Collaborative Effort,’” Soz said

  • Panchayat Ghar wall collapses in Budgam, 13- year old boy dies

    Budgam, Mar 16: A 13-year- old boy died after a portion of a wall of panchayat Ghar collapsed and fell on him late on Monday l evening at central Kashmir’s Budgam district

    According to wire service–Kashmir News Observer (KNO), an official identified the deceased as Mehraj-ud-din Sheikh son of Bashir Ahmed Sheikh, a resident Sutharan ,Khag area of Budgam.

    A police official confirmed the death of boy saying investigations into the death have been started—(KNO)

  • Coronavirus Scare: 125 cases test positive; Taj Mahal entry closed

    17 March 2020: India says #COVID2019 positive cases in the country have risen to 125. 103 Indian Nationals and 22 Foreign Nationals. 13 cured till now and 2 deaths reported so far.

    Taj Mahal will be closed for tourists from today in the wake of #COVID2019 pandemic.

    Archeological Survey of India has decided to close 143 ticketed monuments along with Museums till 31st March.

    Meanwhile Moderna Announces First Participant Dosed in NIH-led Phase 1 Study of mRNA Vaccine (mRNA-1273) Against Novel #Coronavirus