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  • Days after joining militant ranks, Awantipora youth qualifies BUMS 3rd Sem with distinction

    Kashmir, kashmir militant
    File Photo

    Pulwama: Aadil Rashid Bhat of Charsoo-Batpora village of Awantipore in South Kashmir’s Pulwama district who recently announced that he has joined militant ranks, Wednesday qualified the Bachelors of Unani Medicine and Surgery (BUMS) with distinction.

    Aadil has secured over 80 per cent marks in 3rd semester of BUMS, the result of which were declared on August 25 (Tuesday).

    BUMS student from Awantipora area who announced his joining few days before has secured over 80 percent marks in 3rd semester of BUMS examination whose result was declared a day before. Adil has got 897 out of 1100 marks—more than 80 per cent. Adil’s 3rd semester BUMS result comes barely a few days after he joined militant ranks.

    Altaf Ahmad, brother of Aadil told the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that after checking the result of his brother, he came to know that Aadil had secured distinction in 3rd Sem BUMS. “All the family members felt sad,” Altaf said. “My brother was a brilliant student and has secured 94 per cent marks in Class 10th examinations. In class 12, he secured 90 per cent marks.”

    One of Aadil’s friends said that he was a genius and very intelligent boy. “All of us are in a shock how he took such an extreme step of joining militancy,” he said. “My friend was a very unique in his character as he was helping all his friends and was always trying to make things easy for everyone.”

    A senior police officer said that they also came to know that Aadil was a brilliant student but unfortunately he choose a different path.

    “Surrender option is always available and his family members must try to bring him back,” he said, adding that “if he will be brought back, he will allowed to resume his studies after legal formalities.”— (KNO)

  • Article 370 aftermath, COVID-19 outbreak: JK Tourism industry records Rs 1168 Cr loss

    2019 recorded 34 per cent decline in tourist footfall, reveal official documents

    Srinagar: Following the abrogation of Article-370 and the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic, the tourism industry in Jammu and Kashmir has recorded a revenue loss to tune of over Rs 1168 crores while in 2019 there has been a decline of 34 percent in tourist footfall.

    The officials in the tourism department have calculated this loss on account of non-functional tourism industry in Kashmir division on the basis of hypothesis of the tourist arrival and their expenditures.

    Official documents available with the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) reveal: “The loss of tourism industry in Kashmir Division is Rs 1166.81 Crores (approximately) on account of non-functional tourism industry from January-04-2019 to June-30-2020.”

    This information was revealed by the Public Information Officer (PIO) of the tourism department in a reply to the queries of a Right to Information (RTI) application filed by the RTI activist M M Shuja.

    “During the year-2018 the number of domestic and foreign tourists visited Kashmir valley was 8,307,58 while as the tourist arrival during 2019 was reported as 56,553,2 which shows there is a decline of 34 percent in tourist footfall and which happened in the aftermath of constitutional changes on August-05-2019,” the PIO said.

    In a reply to RTI queries, the PIO of tourism department said that during the year 2020, the tourist arrival from January to ending July is 17,874 which shows drastic decline in tourist footfall which happened due to Covid-19 Pandemic and subsequent lockdown.

    “Assuming that if a tourist visits to Kashmir valley and spends at least of Rs 20,000 during the stay, then the amount spent by tourists during the year 2018 works out as a total number of tourists multiplied by Rs 20,000 that is Rs 1661.52 crores,” it reads

    The PIO said that similarly during the year 2019, the amount spent by the tourists could be charted out as the total number of tourists (5,65,532) multiplied by Rs 20,000 is equal to Rs 1131.06 Crores.

    “Besides, during the year 2020 upto ending July, the amount spent might work out as 17,874 multiplied by Rs 20,000 is equal to Rs 35.75 Crores,” he replied.

    The PIO said, “It is clear that after assuming the tourists who visited Kashmir valley have spent a minimum of Rs 20,000 each from January-04-2019 to July-31-2020 works out as Rs 1131.06 and Rs 35.75. Hence, the loss of revenue on account of non-functional of tourism industry in Kashmir Division is 1166.81 Crores (approximately) on the basis of assumption referred above.”—(KNO)

  • Jammu man duped of over Rs 19 lakh by cyber fraudster

    PTI

    Jammu: A man in Reasi district here was duped of over Rs 19 lakh by a gang of cyber fraudsters led by a woman who claimed to be an official in the RBI Forex Department, New Delhi, officials said Wednesday.

    The Jammu and Kashmir Police’s Crime Branch on Wednesday registered a case against Soni Sharma and her six associates, mostly residents of Delhi, after preliminary investigation established prima facie offence against them, a spokesman said.

    In his written complaint, Ravinder Singh Nag of Katra claimed that he was deceived by Soni, who identified herself as an official of RBI, Forex Department, New Delhi.

    He alleged that she conned him by claiming that she had a huge sum of money with her and was interested in establishing business with partners in the country.

    Nag complained that Soni promised him huge return on his investments and thus duped him of his hard earned Rs 19, 33,174 which he transferred to different accounts as advance tax money and other expenditure, the spokesman said.

    Other accused are named Roto Kuldeep, Nadeem Khan, Harish Kumar, Mandeep Singh and Kamil Ali (all from Delhi) and Rakesh from Nagaland, he said.

  • Pak army shells forward areas along LoC in J&K’s Poonch

    PTI

    Jammu: Pakistani troops violated the ceasefire on Wednesday by firing and shelling on forward posts and villages in three sectors along the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir’s Poonch district, a defence spokesperson said.

    The Indian Army gave a befitting reply and the cross-border shelling between the two sides was going on when the last reports were received, he added.

    The spokesperson said Pakistan initiated the unprovoked ceasefire violation by firing from small arms and shelling with mortars in Shahpur, Kirni and Qasba sectors around 6.50 pm.

    There was no report of any casualty on the Indian side, he added.

  • 67,151 new COVID cases; 1,059 deaths in India

    PTI

    New Delhi: India’s novel coronavirus tally rose to 32.34 lakh on Wednesday with 67,151 more people testing positive for the infection, while the recoveries have surged to 24,67,758, the Health Ministry said.

    The death toll from the pathogen climbed to 59,449 with 1,059 more fatalities. The recovery rate rose to 76.30 per cent with 63,173 more people having recuperated, while the case fatality rate has declined to 1.84 per cent, the ministry said.

    There are 7,07,267 active cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), comprising 21.87 per cent of the total 32,34,474 infections, the ministry data stated.

    According to the ICMR, 3,76,51,512 tests have been conducted so far, including 8,23,992 samples on Tuesday.

    Of the 1,059 more deaths, 329 are from Maharashtra, 148 from Karnataka, 107 from Tamil Nadu, 92 from Andhra Pradesh and 72 from Uttar Pradesh. Fifty-eight people succumbed to the infection in West Bengal, 49 in Punjab, 20 in Gujarat, 19 in Madhya Pradesh, and 17 each in Delhi and Jharkhand.

    There were 15 more fatalities in Chhattisgarh, 14 in Jammu and Kashmir and 13 in Rajasthan, while 10 people each died due to the contagion in Telangana, Kerala and Haryana.

    Goa and Odisha registered nine deaths each, followed by eight each in Assam and Puducherry, six in Uttarakhand, and five each from Tripura and Bihar. There were three more deaths in Chandigarh, two each in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and Manipur, and one each in Himachal Pradesh and Ladakh.

    Of the total 59,449 deaths, Maharashtra has reported the maximum of 22,794 followed by 6,721 in Tamil Nadu, 4,958 in Karnataka, 4,330 in Delhi, 3,460 in Andhra Pradesh and 3,059 in Uttar Pradesh.

    Gujarat registered 2,928 fatalities, followed by 2,909 in West Bengal, 1,265 in Madhya Pradesh. A total of 1,178 people have died in Punjab, 980 in Rajasthan, 780 in Telangana, 638 in Jammu and Kashmir and 623 in Haryana.

    There were 519 coronavirus deaths in Bihar, 428 in Odisha, 347 in Jharkhand, 260 in Assam and 244 in Kerala. Chhattisgarh reported 221 fatalities, followed by 213 in Uttarakhand, 172 in Puducherry, 157 in Goa and 83 in Tripura.

    Forty people died from the pathogen in Chandigarh, 37 in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, 30 in Himachal Pradesh, 24 each in Ladakh and Manipur. Nagaland registered nine deaths, followed by eight in Meghalaya, five in Arunachal Pradesh, three in Sikkim and two in Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu.

    The ministry stressed that more than 70 per cent of the deaths occurred due to comorbidities.

    “Our figures are being reconciled with the Indian Council of Medical Research,” the ministry said, adding that statewise distribution of figures was subject to further verification and reconciliation.

  • JK has highest chances of climate vulnerability, Floods declared nine times since 2014

    Srinagar: Indicating how Jammu and Kashmir is vulnerable to floods, at least floods were declared or water level rose above danger mark nine times for the last five years in the state.
    It has been seen over the years that a few hours of rain are enough to create a flood scare in the state.

    As per official figures, the Irrigation and Flood Control Department, the authorities have declared floods at least nine times since 2014.
    As per the figures, the floods hit the state in September 2014. The water level also increased above the danger mark or created flood like situation in March 2015, April 2015, June 2015, July 2015, September 2015, April 2017, June 2018, and June 2019.

    The Union Ministry of Water Resources in December 2014 asked the state government for framing of the detailed project report for the 80-km Dogripora flood channel to be constructed from Awantipora in south Kashmir to Wular Lake in north Kashmir’s Bandipora district.
    As per news agency Kashmir Indepth News Service (KINS), under this mega project, a Rs 18,000 crore flood channel was to be created to carry the surplus flood discharge of Jhelum.

    According to a disaster management report, 13 districts in J&K, out of 100 districts in India, have been identified as ‘multi-hazard districts’.
    “Majority areas of the valley, especially Sonawari, Awantipora and Srinagar, along with parts of Jammu are prone to floods. Upper catchments of all the tributaries of the Jhelum, Indus, Chenab and Tawi rivers are prone to flash floods,” the report said. All these areas were worst hit by September-2014 floods and are prone to floods.

    While the recent study says that out of the 12 states, Assam, Mizoram and Jammu & Kashmir are extremely vulnerable to global warming.
    “Based on this assessment, the vulnerability index is found to be the highest for Assam (0.72) and Mizoram (0.71), followed by Jammu and Kashmir (0.62), Manipur (0.59), Meghalaya and West Bengal (both 0.58), Nagaland (0.57), Himachal Pradesh and Tripura (0.51 both), Arunachal Pradesh (0.47) and Uttarakhand (0.45). Sikkim is the least vulnerable state with the index being 0.42,” the study says.

    It says that, “Several drivers of vulnerability are evident for the state of J&K. These include, in the order of significance, least road density, no area under crop insurance, low area under forests per 1,000 rural households, high percentage of marginal farmers, low percentage area under horticulture crops, low livestock to human ratio and low percentage of women in the overall workforce.”

    The study says that climate change is already occurring and impacting natural ecosystems and human societies.

    It says, “To reduce these uncertainties and plan towards sustainable development it is essential to adopt evidence based adaptation planning in IHR. This requires an in-depth understanding of the key risks and vulnerabilities derived from scientific assessments.”

    The study has been authored by IIT Guwahati Anamika Barua Associate Professor Deptt. of Humanities and Social Science Principal Investigator Rupam Bhaduri Research Scholar Centre for the Environment Vishaka Gulati Research Scholar Deptt. of Humanities and Social Sciences IIT Mandi Shyamasree Dasgupta Assistant Professor School of Humanities and Social Sciences Co – Principal Investigator Kritishnu Sanyal Project Associate School of Humanities and Social Sciences Mir Khursheed Alam Research Scholar School of Humanities and Social Sciences IISc Bangalore N.H. Ravindranath Professor Centre for Sustainable Technologies (CST) Key Resource Person Indu K Murthy Consultant Scientist Centre for Sustainable Technologies Tashina Esteves Research Associate Jagmohan Sharma Additional Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (Forest Conservation) Government of Karnataka.

    It is to mention here that last year the government had decided to conduct a safety audit of river embankments of Jhelum and other streams.

    “Chief Engineers of Irrigation and Flood Control department have been directed to conduct zoning of river Jhelum and other streams and conduct safety audit of river embankments of Jhelum and other streams especially at vulnerable spots and plug it at an earliest besides also conduct physical survey of the encroachments in nallahs and rivers and ensure their immediate removal and store geo bags in advance,” the government had said.

    The government had further informed that the DCs have been directed to collect an information of resources, including men, low lying areas, satellite phones, availability of geo quality of sand bags, JCBs, ambulances, tents, dewatering pumps, evacuation plan, storage of essential commodities, list of nodal officers, water tankers, water supply schemes, NGOs working for disaster management.

    After 2014 deluge, the government had announced that dredging of river Jhelum would be completed by December 2016 to prevent floods in future.(KINS)

  • Saving India’s Urdu heritage, one book at a time

    PTI

    New Delhi: Priceless pieces of Urdu poetry and books on art, literature and history confined to dark corners of private homes and public libraries have found a new home all 1,00,000 of them digitised and ready to access for students, researchers and bibliophiles.

    The world’s largest repository of Urdu books is the brainchild of Sanjiv Saraf, the man behind India’s first and largest Urdu festival Jashn-e-Rekhta, who took it upon himself to collect and digitise books that were otherwise destined to be lost forever in the ruins of time.

    Childhood memories of listening to ghazals on vinyl records kindled love for the language. And then, as he grew up, the strong urge to read the masters of Urdu poetry in the original script inspired Saraf to start learning the rasm ul-khat’ (Urdu script).

    But to his dismay there were virtually no resources available on the internet. Saraf told PTI.

    That was eight years ago.

    The mission that began in 2012 with the love for Urdu poetry culminated in July with the Rekhta Foundation digitising a colossal 1,00,000 books.

    Saraf, who is based in Delhi and comes from a business family of Rajasthani origin, did all that was expected of an heir-apparent he did his schooling from the Scindia School in Gwalior, graduated from IIT Kharagpur in 1980, joined the family business in 1984, and later established Polyplex Corporation, a multinational business in polyester films.

    But the old love of listening to ghazals, courtesy his father’s fondness for Urdu shayari’, tugged at him.

    Later, when business got established and was growing well, I stepped back from business to focus on learning Urdu. In the process, I realised there wasn’t enough content or resources available on the Internet and what was available was incomplete, non credible and mostly in Urdu script. The younger generation, attracted to the eloquence, beauty and versatility of the language had no easy recourse, Saraf said in an email interview.

    The initiative began small and soon mushroomed into a massive project that covered not just rare books but also all other forms, including recent books, manuscripts and periodicals that were digitised with the aim of preserving them for posterity.

    Teams of enthusiastic volunteers were sent to public and private libraries all over the country to look for books and found entire Urdu collections lying forgotten and often neglected.

    …as we progressed and as students, scholars and others started benefitting through e-books, whether for study, research or simple reading, we started receiving a welcoming response from the libraries/individuals that we contacted, and they started coming forward to share their holdings, said the businessman-turned-Urdu connoisseur.

    Terming the initiative extraordinary , Urdu scholar C M Naim said he used the website (www.rekhta.com) almost on a daily basis for one reason or another.

    I regularly check to see what is new. I’m sure the same is done by many enthusiasts of Urdu, in academia or outside, across the world. I have recently been working on crime fiction in Urdu, and was happy to see that the Rekhta archive has managed to find a fair number of these otherwise hard to find books, Naim said.

    He added that while Rekhta wasn’t the first to take up this initiative, it was the one to do it with respect to old books and journals.

    Naim, professor emeritus at the University of Chicago, remembered Carnegie Mellon’s 2007 Million Book project which also covered Hyderabad and said, Regretfully, it was done in a criminal fashion.

    …they freely unbound books in order to scan the pages and then paid little attention to their being rebound properly. The Rekhta project was respectful of the material, and used only the most appropriate ways to achieve their goal. It made their progress slow but they also did not leave behind hundreds of unbound Urdu books lying on the floor as I saw in Hyderabad, Naim recalled.

    A dedicated team of 53 members works on the ebooks project — 30 high-end machines in 16 libraries across the country scan and add 2,500 books a month to the digital collection.

    This unique e-library comprises books on science, arts, religion, history in its different genres, literary journals issued by various institutions and organisations, apart from contemporary books, and classical books that can be searched and sorted by genre, period and author.

    The collection, running into nearly 19 million pages, includes the lost treasures of Munshi Naval Kishore Press, the complete works of classical poets Mir Taqi Mir and Mirza Ghalib, all 46 volumes of Persian epic Daastan-e-Amir Hamza , the works of 11th century Persian philosopher Imam Mohammad Ghazali, and 13th century Sufi poet Amir Khusrau as well as the works of obscure poets and scholars.

    If one wants to read the entire 19 million-page Rekhta stack – without blinking and at a statistical 65 pages an hour rate – it would take 33 years and 36 days! Saraf said.

    Over 25,000 people visit the e-book section at the Rekhta Foundation website every day, he said.

    It would be ideal if there could be a public-private coordinated effort and cooperation for digitisation of our literary heritage. However, this is easier said than done. There are a large number of agencies involved and getting everyone on the same page is a herculean effort, he said.

    In 2015, the Rekhta Foundation started Jashn-e-Rekhta, a festival of the letters and the arts to popularise Urdu. In 2017, it launched Aamozish, an e-learning platform, where over 60,000 people have learnt the language till date.

    The Rekhta Foundation also launched Sufinama, an online collection of Sufi poetry, in 2019 and Hindwi, a website dedicated to Hindi literature, in July this year.

    Primarily funded through Polyplex Corporation Ltd’s CSR commitments and Saraf’s personal funds, Rekhta Foundation also receives donations from corporations and friends of Rekhta.

    However, to be sustainable in the coming years, Rekhta Foundation has been working on models which will make itself self-sustaining through content syndication services, book sales through its marketplace and host of other self-sustaining models without impacting users and their engagement with Rekhta platforms, Saraf added.

  • Govt needs to spend more, not lend more: Rahul Gandhi

    PTI

    New Delhi: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday attacked the government over the state of the economy and said it needs to give money to the poor to restart the economy through consumption

    Gandhi said “distractions” through media won’t help the poor or make the “economic disaster disappear”

    His attack on the government came after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said on Tuesday that demand in the economy will take quite some time to mend and that an assessment of aggregate demand during the year so far suggests that the shock to consumption is severe

    “RBI has now confirmed what I have been warning for months. Govt needs to: spend more, not lend more,” Gandhi said

    “Give money to the poor, not tax cuts to industrialists. Restart economy by consumption,” the former Congress chief tweeted

    In its latest annual report, the RBI said “deep-seats and wide-ranging” reforms are needed to regain losses and return to the path of sustainable economic growth.

  • J-K reports 19 more COVID deaths, over 700 fresh cases

    PTI

    Srinagar: Over 700 new cases of coronavirus were detected in Jammu and Kashmir during the past 24 hours, taking the tally to 34,480 while the death toll reached 657 with 19 more fatalities, officials said on Wednesday.

    Fifteen deaths were reported from Kashmir and four from the Jammu region, they said.

    “Nineteen persons infected with coronavirus have died in Jammu and Kashmir in the past 24 hours till 5 pm on Wednesday,” the officials said.

    Meanwhile, 704 fresh cases of COVID-19 were reported from the Union Territory, taking the total number of infected persons to 34,480 in Jammu and Kashmir, the officials said.

    Among the new cases, 195 were from the Jammu region, while 509 were from Kashmir, they said.

    Srinagar district reported the highest number of 198 new cases, followed by 98 in Jammu district, the officials said.

    There are 7,630 active cases in the UT, while 26,193 patients have recovered from the infection so far, they said.

  • Rupee settles nearly flat at 74.33 in line with equities

    PTI

    Mumbai: The rupee pared its early gains to settle almost flat at 74.33 against the US dollar on Tuesday, tracking muted domestic equities.

    Analysts said the rupee closed steady due to suspected intervention by the RBI amid forex inflows and positive global cues.

    At the interbank forex market, the domestic unit witnessed highly volatile trade. It opened on a strong note at 74.17, but lost ground during the day and finally ended at 74.33 against the greenback, down 1 paisa over its previous close of 74.32 against the American currency. The rupee had surged to a five-month high on Monday on capital inflows.

    During the day, the local unit witnessed an intra-day high of 74.17 and a low of 74.51 against the US dollar.

    “The Indian rupee ended little changed against the dollar on Tuesday as suspected central bank intervention in the spot market offset the impact of positive regional cues and persistent greenback inflows,” said Sriram Iyer, Senior Research Analyst, Reliance Securities.

    According to Iyer, news of a potential coronavirus treatment and indications that the phase-one US-China trade deal remained on course supported risk sentiment in the region.

    Moreover, Asian currencies were higher and lent support. The onshore Chinese Yuan strengthened to near 6.90 to the dollar.

    Traders now await Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s speech at the annual Jackson Hole summit on Thursday for further cues.

    Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank of India said it will conduct simultaneous purchase and sale of government securities under Open Market Operations (OMO) for an aggregate amount of Rs 20,000 crore in two tranches.

    The auction will be in held in two tranches of Rs 10,000 crore each and will be conducted on August 27 and September 3, 2020, the RBI said in a statement.

    “We see the rupee to remain range bound following sharp up-move on the back of foreign fund inflows yesterday. Tone remain bullish on easy liquidity and optimism about COVID-19 vaccine. From the domestic economic data points, we also see fast recovery in high frequency indicators, better monsoon progress,” HDFC Securities Deputy Head Retail Research Devarsh Vakil said.

    Vakil further said that “in near term, rupee expected to trade with positive bias and we could see level below 73.80 a dollar. The bullish trend in rupee will negate only above 75 and strength above 73.80 opens for 73.36 a dollar, 50 Week Simple moving average”.

    Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, was trading 0.12 per cent down at 93.18.

    On the domestic equity market front, key stock indices Sensex and Nifty extended gains for the third day. The 30-share BSE benchmark Sensex closed 44.80 points or 0.12 per cent higher at 38,843.88. The NSE Nifty inched up 5.80 points or 0.05 per cent to close at 11,472.25.

    Foreign institutional investors were net buyers in the capital market as they purchased shares worth Rs 219.07 crore on Monday, according to provisional exchange data.

    Brent crude futures, the global oil benchmark, rose 0.27 per cent to USD 45.25 per barrel.