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Tuesday, 31 August 2021

India, Taliban hold first talks: What lies ahead for New Delhi, China, Pakistan in Afghanistan

With the United States ringing in the formal end to two decades of misadventure with a C-17 military aircraft on Monday ferrying out the last of the American troops one minute before the 31 August deadline set by US president Joe Biden, Afghanistan now stares at a convulsive future under the Taliban.

Its rocky deserts and rough terrain have seen multiple empires crash and burn through history. Washington is merely the latest. As the US reflects on “two decades of mistakes and collective failure”, it is worth noting how three major players in the region — China, Pakistan and India — are poised to tackle the geopolitical consequences of America’s exit and the collective challenges that will inexorably emerge.

China

The withdrawal of the US and the Taliban’s lightning takeover of power has left China, the putative superpower, facing a dilemma — whether to eventually move in to fill the geopolitical vacuum and secure its interests that will inevitably bring a set of onerous commitments or stay circumspect and avoid getting sucked into the geopolitical quicksand. Beijing’s recent manoeuvres reveal a dialectic division in the thinking process.

As an emerging global hegemon, China has ever-expanding national security and economic interests. It must define, protect and promote these interests and look to shape global events to facilitate further its rise. That calls for deeper engagement in its near geography.

However, China is determined not to make the mistakes that the USSR or the US has committed in Afghanistan. The Chinese Communist Party has studied scrupulously the reasons behind the fall of the USSR — that made a ruinous military bid for Afghanistan, hastening own downfall — and is noting with interest what it interprets as terminal damage to America’s reputation and influence in the aftermath of Afghanistan debacle.

In a press conference on 17 August, two days after the Taliban walked into Kabul and sent the Biden administration into a tailspin, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said: “Wherever the US sets foot, be it Iraq, Syria or Afghanistan, we see turbulence, division, broken families, deaths and other scars in the mess it has left… A model copied from another country can hardly fit or stand in a country with distinctively different history, culture and national conditions. Solving problems with power and military means would only lead to even more problems.”

Aversion to military intervention even in revanchism has generally been China’s preferred strategic choice. It relies on salami-slicing to fulfill its agenda of territorial aggrandizement and tries to stay below the conflict threshold — a tactic that hasn’t always worked with India. As it manages its own rise and shapes its sphere of influence, China has defined the trajectory of its rise in thoroughly antithetical terms to the US. It wants superpower status, has patiently chalked out plans to become the global hegemon by 2049 but wants to achieve these goals without any expansive security commitments.

This poses some constrictions on China. It may have been gloating at US discomfiture during the bungling exit and its state media may have gone to town claiming that America’s credibility and reliability is in crisis but China had so far been quite content with America’s role as the security guarantor next door in a region that is a veritable witches’ brew of terrorism and ethnic insurgency.

It is being said that with the US vacating its presence, China is free to launch commercial projects, expand its Belt and Road Initiative and tap into the riches that lie buried within Afghanistan. Chinese state media has been telling stories of an impoverished nation that needs to be rapidly developed, resulting in feverish anticipation among private Chinese entrepreneurs of profiting from lucrative construction and infrastructure projects.

Chinese commentators such as Zhou Bo, a former PLA Colonel, claimed in New York Times that “though critics have raised the point that Chinese investment is not a strategic priority in a less secure Afghanistan… they have a reputation for investing in less stable countries if it means they can reap the rewards. That doesn’t always happen so smoothly, but China has patience.”

And yet Chinese state entrepreneurs, who know better, have struck a more cautious and sombre tone, and are fearful of being caught in the morass of sanctions or scared of being cut-off from the global banking network. Global Times quotes one spokesperson of a Chinese state-owned enterprise as saying, “without policy guidance, investing in Afghanistan is highly risky and not cost-effective. For example, the funds for building the highway project were loaned from the Asia Development Bank, but we didn't even earn a penny.”

The stories of China charging in to unearth the rare minerals in Afghanistan must be tempered with the reality that the copper mine project in Mes Aynak, for which a Chinese state-owned firm won exploitation rights in 2007, is yet to commence work.

To quote Chinese analyst Yun Sun of Stimson Centre in War on the Rocks, “as long as the security environment remains unstable, China is unlikely to launch major economic projects in Afghanistan. The American troop presence there was not the factor hindering Chinese economic activities. In fact, Chinese companies had benefited from the stability that US troops provided. Therefore, the US withdrawal is unlikely to encourage major Chinese investment.” What we have, in essence, is mixed messaging. China wants the world to judge the Taliban “more rationally”, Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi tells US secretary of state Antony Blinken that “all sides must proactively guide the Taliban” and China’s special Afghan envoy calls the Taliban a “friendly” bunch  and vows continued engagement.

And yet, Chinese president Xi Jinping tells his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin that “all factions in Afghanistan to build an open and inclusive political structure through consultation, implement moderate and prudent domestic and foreign policies, thoroughly dissociate from all terrorist groups, and maintain friendly relations with the rest of the world, especially neighboring countries.”

This is not 64D chess, but a likely reflection of the lack of strategic clarity that dominates current Chinese thinking on Afghanistan. For all their bluster, China’s top leadership is worried about the security fallout. Beijing fears an explosion of radical Islamist groups, inspired by Taliban’s victory, taking the region hostage and has low confidence on the Taliban’s ability to provide the political stability and security guarantee that China seeks in its periphery. Chinese concerns would have intensified with the suicide blast at Kabul airport and the US airstrikes that have followed, and it would only serve to deepen its reluctance to step into the quagmire

China is extremely worried about the resurgence of China-specific groups such as the ‘East Turkestan Islamic Movement’ (ETIM), a Muslim separatist group founded by militant Uighurs, and Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP) that has issued a statement congratulating the Taliban for their “victory”.

China will expect Pakistan to wield its influence over the Islamist groups hosted, nurtured and backed by Islamabad. The Taliban themselves have gone out of their way to woo China and have promised all safety and security but Beijing has seen this movie before. It remains deeply sceptical. It also understands that even Pakistan has limitations on its control over a faction-ridden Taliban.

As GMF analyst Andrew Small writes, “China isn’t naïve enough to think that Taliban control of Afghanistan magically transforms a country that has been at war for decades into a place where they can comfortably do business. Their investments can still be threatened by local grievances, an assortment of jihadi groups, foreign intelligence services, guns for hire, factional divisions, and a host of other factors, even in circumstances where the Taliban are largely able to maintain order.”

China is unlikely to send its troops (except perhaps as part of a UN peacekeeping mission) inside Afghanistan, and despite knowing that its involvement in the war-torn country will inevitably increase, it will remain averse to making elaborate security commitments, even if to safeguard own interests. Therefore, Beijing may refrain from expanding its interests within Afghanistan until it is sure of sustainable stability even at the cost of scaling down its imperial ambitions. So far, its policy seems to be that of continued engagement with the Taliban.

Beijing assesses that the ideologically motivated Taliban aren’t likely to change, neither will they sever ties with the myriad terrorist groups with whom the Taliban share an umbilical jihadist chord. But it knows that the Taliban are desperate for investment and international recognition and hopes to use these as leverage to pressurize it to clean up its house and form a modicum of an “inclusive” government.

Pakistan

In its hour of glory, Pakistan is worried. Its powerful military establishment has long coveted and connived for a situation in Afghanistan where a Pakistan-friendly (if not controlled) government is in power, and the country is free of India’s presence and American military footprint. All its wishes have turned into reality. Perhaps a little too quickly and readily for its liking.

To quote from the University of London professor Avinash Paliwal’s column in Hindustan Times, “Fifty years after losing East Pakistan in 1971, Rawalpindi has finally, to its mind, achieved a strategic win that it deeply desired. Unlike on its eastern front, Pakistan doesn’t have a strategic adversary to its west anymore.”

Rivalry with India is the raison d'être of Pakistan’s existence. The magnitude of the development that left India with a black eye, causing New Delhi to close its consulates, shut down the embassy and evacuate diplomats has therefore caused Pakistan much satisfaction. Along with it, the fact that a rag-tag army of Sunni Islamist fundamentalists has defeated and humiliated the world’s sole superpower means that Pakistan — which has trained the fighters and nurtured their leadership — may legitimately look forward to a period of undiluted strategic influence on its western front. The memo was to celebrate in private, but some political leaders possibly didn’t get the memo.

What the world saw as a mainstreaming of terrorists with Taliban’s takeover, Pakistan’s prime minister termed as “breaking the shackles of slavery”. Never mind that thousands of Afghan nationals preferred to risk their lives and flee the country instead of trusting the Taliban. A few clung on desperately to American military aircraft and plunged to their deaths.

“The Taliban were a strategic project of the Pakistani military intelligence agency, the ISI”, writes Sarah Chayes, former special adviser to the US military in Afghanistan.  The Taliban (meaning ‘students’ in Pashto) studied in the religious seminaries of Pakistan’s Pashtun-dominated provinces and its founder Mullah Omar received ISI training during the war against the USSR.

As a partner of America’s ‘war on terror’, Washington gave its major-non-NATO ally “more than $33 billion in assistance, including about $14.6 billion in so-called Coalition Support Funds paid by the Pentagon to the Pakistani military between 2002 and 2018,” notes Sadanand Dhume in Wall Street Journal.

Most of that money was spent by Pakistan’s powerful military generals in propping up the very Taliban that the US was fighting, ostensibly with Pakistan’s help. Islamabad gave the group and its leaders safe haven, financial, logistical, military and even diplomatic support while officially acting against the group as America’s ‘ally’. In the last leg of Taliban’s coup against the beleaguered Afghan government, Pakistan even strategized for the Taliban.

“In the last three months as the Taliban swept across Afghanistan, the Pakistani military waved a surge of new fighters across the border from sanctuaries inside Pakistan, tribal leaders have said. It was a final coup de grace to the American-trained Afghan security forces,” writes Jane Perlez in New York Times.

Pakistan sees in Taliban’s rise, therefore, the fructification of its two-decade-old project. Having secured its prize, however, Islamabad is now in a quandary. For one, the rapidity of the Afghan government’s collapse and the fluidity with which the insurgent group gained power has robbed Pakistan — which had hoped to install itself as a broker of political settlement — of some leverage. A Taliban that is in total control of the levers of power in Afghanistan will need to heed little of the demands that Pakistan is likely to place on them.

And therein lies Pakistan’s biggest worry. For a nation that has seen centuries of sectarian and ethnic strife, Afghanistan may witness the Taliban facing internal resistance at some point in time, leading to sustained instability. That possibility has caused Pakistan to pitch and press the Taliban for an “inclusive government”, sharing some power with different groups and warlords.

Regardless of the actual control, Pakistan may wield over the Taliban, for all practical purposes it now owns the political and security situation in Afghanistan and will be held responsible in that role by the world at large. More importantly for Islamabad, China will most certainly lean on it to keep the radical elements in check and faltering in that responsibility is not an option for Pakistan.

The crown of thorns that Pakistan has won through years of hard work may seem thornier still if Afghanistan suffers an economic meltdown.

The Biden administration has already frozen the Afghan government’s reserves held in US bank accounts as US treasury bonds and offshore gold reserves. So, the Taliban can access only 0.1-0.2% of Afghanistan’s total international reserves of roughly $9 billion, reports the BBCThe IMF, too, has suspended Afghanistan’s access to resources, and so has the World Bank, leading to even more downward pressure on the economy of a country whose 75 percent civilian budget comes from foreign aid. Afghans are already feeling the pinch with prices of everyday essentials shooting through the roof, salaries remaining unpaid and long queues outside cash-starved banks.

Fearing a likely economic collapse, inevitable unrest and another explosion of refugees at its door, Pakistan is threatening the West (read the United States) with an ultimatum that unless the sanction noose is loosened, and if Afghanistan is engaged with, there will be another 9/11. Having issued the threat in his interview with The Times, London, however, Pakistan’s NSA Moeed Yusuf has since backtracked. It may have sounded too grotesque, but Yusuf hopes that Washington got the point.

The pressure on Pakistan, therefore, is palpable as the first flush of victory dissipates and the hangover associated with a security nightmare at the border and a fragmented political landscape beyond it sets in. Pakistan remains fearful of the Taliban’s victory inspiring instability, chiefly from the myriad jihadi movements active within its borders. Pakistan also remains discomfited by the fact that the Taliban still maintain ties with the Pakistan Taliban (TTP) — the Pashtun militant group that has vowed “to war with Pakistan until it secures an independent Pashtunistan”.

Finally, Pakistan would also note Taliban’s continued overtures to India that resulted in the first official diplomatic meeting between India and the Taliban on Tuesday in Doha. In reaching out to India, the insurgent group is risking Pakistan’s ire, which indicates that the Taliban are willing to hedge their bets.

India

Nearly all postmortems of Taliban’s ascension and America’s defeat throw up the conclusion that India has been the second-biggest loser from the fiasco, with its two decades worth of investment in the America-installed democratic government in Afghanistan going up in smoke. In a recent event, Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat admitted that while India anticipated a Taliban takeover and had done “contingency planning”, the timeline took New Delhi by surprise.

That “contingency planning” meant steady deduction of diplomatic staff and clandestine channels with the Taliban, but India kept betting on the Ashraf Ghani government staying put for at least a couple of months. As Ghani fled and his government caved in without a fight, India shut down the embassy and flew out its remaining diplomatic staff even as Pakistan, China and Russia kept theirs functional.

The nearly $3 billion that India has spent so far since 2001 in building dams, roads, electricity transmission lines, infrastructure projects, schools, hospital, education and capacity building, technical assistance and training of Afghan officers in its military academies, duty-free trade and scholarships to thousands of students are now at risk. As External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said in November 2020 while speaking at the Afghanistan Conference in Geneva, “no part of Afghanistan today is untouched by the 400-plus projects that India has undertaken in all 34 of Afghanistan’s provinces”.

While these projects and India’s footprint are at risk, New Delhi’s biggest concern is preventing Afghanistan from turning into a nursery for terrorist groups antithetical to India. Taliban’s victory is sure to embolden the India-specific terrorist outfits such as Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) — that carried out the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai.

Anand Arni, former R&AW official, writes in Takshashila Institution that LeT, which he calls a “clandestine special forces unit of Pakistan’s ISI”, has become more active in Afghanistan of late after a brief hiatus, and “there have been persistent reports of several hundred LeT militants being spotted in Kunduz and in Kunar.”

Apart from the security challenges that arise for the restive Jammu and Kashmir from a Taliban-controlled Afghanistan and a more confident Pakistan that orchestrates the terrorist groups, India also faces erosion of its strategic influence. The closing down of its presence in the war-torn nation robs the Indian security establishment of crucial over-the-horizon leverage and cripples its ability to gather the intelligence needed to secure its interests.

Most of the bleak assessments on India arise from the axiomatic belief that the Taliban is a monolithic entity, and buried under a mountain of gratitude it would do Pakistan’s bidding. So far, that doesn’t seem to be the case. Shortly before India flew out its diplomats, senior Taliban leader Sher Mohammed Abbas Stanekzai reportedly requested New Delhi to retain its diplomatic presence.

Stanikzai would continue with his outreach to India. On 28 August, in a 46-minute video posted on the Taliban’s social media platform, Stanekzai spoke on the Taliban’s relations with regional powers and on India, he said: “India is very important for this subcontinent. We want to continue our cultural, economic and trade ties with India like in the past, “ adding that “trade with India through Pakistan is very important for us,” according to Hindustan Times.

The following day CNN-News18 quoted Stanekzai, considered to be third in pecking order among Taliban’s senior leadership, as saying that the Taliban is interested in developing “friendly” relations with India, said that the infrastructure projects built by India are Afghanistan’s “national assets”, and requested India to “come and start again and finish the incomplete projects”. He also said that “There is no doubt that there is a long political and geographical dispute between India and Pakistan. We hope they do not use Afghanistan in their internal fight, they have a long border, they can fight amongst themselves on the border. They should not use Afghanistan for this and we will not let any country use our land for this.”

It is too early to say whether the Taliban is seeking to balance its ties with Pakistan by using India as leverage. That is in the realm of speculation. What isn’t, is that the Taliban was showing a marked interest in opening an official channel of communication with India.

That occurred on Tuesday when India announced that its ambassador to Qatar, Deepak Mittal, a former joint secretary at the MEA looking after Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran, has held formal talks with Stanekzai, the head of Taliban’s political office in Doha, “at the Embassy of India, Doha, on the request of the Taliban side.”

In a readout, the MEA said, “discussions focused on safety, security and early return of Indian nationals stranded in Afghanistan. The travel of Afghan nationals, especially minorities, who wish to visit to India also came up. Ambassador Mittal raised India’s concern that Afghanistan’s soil should not be used for anti-Indian activities and terrorism in any manner. The Taliban Representative assured the Ambassador that these issues would be positively addressed.”

Several points are worth noting. First, the meeting occurred at Taliban’s request. Second, it was conducted inside the premises of Indian embassy in Doha and third, a top Taliban leader was formally involved. It cannot be a coincidence that the first official diplomatic overture between the two sides took place just two days after India, as UNSC president, signed off a statement that stopped short of naming Taliban in a paragraph that called for Afghan groups not to support terrorists.

It is also worth considering that while India’s stakes — in absence of the democratic government in Afghanistan which it had been explicitly supporting — are considerably low, the same isn’t true of the Taliban that risks inviting Pakistan’s displeasure. It points to Taliban’s effort in normalizing ties with neighbours with an aim of gaining international recognition, and equally an opportunity for India to look forward in cautious optimism.

Relatedly, though Pakistan enjoys an upper hand in the regional geopolitical realignment, India, as former foreign secretary Shyam Saran has suggested, should encourage Pakistan in its boast as the “most influential actor in Kabul”. That opens up the chance for India to hold Pakistan responsible for lapses in Afghanistan’s political and security environment that may inevitably arise because Islamabad is trying to juggle too many balls in the air.

“What though the field be lost? All is not lost,” wrote John  Milton. These lines could be India’s guiding principle.



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Opinion| India’s closet Taliban are crawling out of woodwork after the fall of Kabul

Blood of the innocent flows 1,000 kilometres away in Kabul, but beasts of prey in Delhi have tasted it. The dormant support among certain sections in India for the most violent manifestation of Islam is coming out in the open. Many of them are loud votaries of secularism otherwise.

One high-decibel victory in the neighbourhood, and they are cheering for the hordes who have snatched power by recruiting little boys for armed jihad, raping them, killing enemies most violently and looting houses.

Why? In order to establish a “pure and just” caliphate-style government where women are disallowed in public or most jobs, are made to wear tents around, stoned to death for adultery and little girls taken as sex slaves of the Mujahideen.

But the Taliban have suddenly turned into freedom fighters, liberated educationists, and “legitimate stakeholders” for a section of Indian Muslims.

Their values are being upheld most vocally.

Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind has called for separate schools and colleges for girls. It has asked parents to shun co-education for their daughters. Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind (Maulana Arshad Madani faction) chief Arshad Madani appealed to the influential and the wealthy to set up separate local institutions for girls.

Madani said obscenity has been condemned in every religion, and so, “we will also ask our non-Muslim brothers to refrain from giving co-education to their daughters to keep them away from immorality and misbehaviour”.

Recently, Samajwadi Party MP from Uttar Pradesh’s Sambhal, Shafiqur Rahman Barq, was all praise for the Taliban for “recapturing the land that originally belonged to them”.

“When India was under British rule, our country fought for freedom. Now the Taliban wants to free their country and run it. Taliban is a force that did not allow even strong countries like Russia and America to settle in their country,” he reportedly said.

A Twitter Space discussion which was being held as Kabul fell to the Taliban featured an accused in Delhi riots and another who has been to jail for problematic posts on social media.

The riot accused reportedly remarked, “Let me give you guys a piece of good news – Ashraf Ghani has resigned. Thanks to Allah! Slowly and gradually, it will lead to the establishment of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (governed by the Taliban). We need to take inspiration from them and learn how to struggle in the pursuit of freedom movement or azaadi.”

Members of the commentariat who otherwise advocate secularism and feminism — while almost solely criticising Hindutva groups and not Islamists — seemed to drop their pretence.

Journalist Ghazala Wahab tweeted: “I call them (Taliban) insurgents, because while they use the help of terrorists towards upturning governments…just because they are spreading terror and oppressing women, to say they do not have stakes in the area is foolish.”

There is a swift push to give the Taliban moral legitimacy, whitewashing its ongoing massacres, unleashing sexual slavery, paedophilia, extreme misogyny and torture. The Taliban’s ideology is suddenly halal for many, and there is a growing market in India for its import.



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Jaipur company offers employees 'Netflix and chill' holiday on 3 Sep to watch ‘Money Heist’

As the release date for the final season of the globally acclaimed Spanish show La Casa de Papel or Money Heist nears, a Jaipur-based company is offering its employees a ‘Netflix and chill holiday’ to binge-watch the show on 3 September.

The firm, Verve Logic, shared a post on Twitter, which featured an email to the employees from the company’s CEO Abhishek Jain.

In his mail, Jain had stated that the reason for the holiday was to save an attack on our emails with false leaves or witness mass bunks and switched off mobile phones on the day.

 He added that the firm understood that it was okay to take a break sometimes to recharge. Jain also said that he wanted to thank all employees for their efforts, saying that after all the stress of recent times “we know after all, ‘Ek Break to Banta Hai’”.

He signed off on the email with the words "Bella Ciao," a nod to the show's anthem. Verve Logic also released a mock schedule for its employees to follow on the day, with dedicated time slots for gushing about the show.

The post grabbed eyeballs around the world, with even Netflix India’s official account commenting on the post. The streaming giant joked that it had already prepared excuses for skipping work, but the idea of a holiday was “fantastic”.

One of the most popular shows globally, the final part of Money Heist will feature the Professor (Álvaro Morte) and his gang trapped inside the Bank of Spain while trying to evade capture one last time.

https://ift.tt/38pNmDY

The series features a hugely talented cast including Úrsula Corberó, Álvaro Morte, Itziar Ituño, Esther Acebo, Pedro Alonso and Jaime Lorrente. The show features thrilling escapes, romance, friendship, betrayal, and nerve-wracking heists.

 



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New Zealand website sells 'charpai' as 'Vintage Indian Daybed' for Rs 41,000

A common Indian household item has been given a marketing spin by New Zealand retailer ANNABELLE’S, much to the amusement and ire of Indians on social media.

Pitching a ‘charpai’ or cot as a ‘vintage Indian daybed,’ the retailer has sought to market the product at an exponential cost. The charpai sold by the ANNABELLE’S is priced at $800.00 NZD, equivalent to roughly Rs 41,000. In the Indian market, a charpai can be found for as low as Rs 800.

The product may have been sourced from India itself, as per the website of ANNABELLE’S, which says it has procured handmade items from India, China, and Indonesia on trips.

This is not the first time Indian products have been sold at inflated prices to consumers.

In 2019, a British clothing brand faced flak for marketing traditional Indian Kurtis, without salwars, as “vintage, boho dresses”. Users criticised the promotional posts of the clothing and the pricing of the outfits. Each kameez was priced from 20 to 36 GBP or approximately Rs 1,775 to Rs 3,190 at that time. Following huge criticism, the website pulled the product down.

In fact, it is not just foreign brands who have been the target of social media ire for their over-priced products.

Recently, fashion designer Sabyasachi was trolled for his new collaboration with brand H&M. The designer, most famous for his luxurious and gorgeous designs, faced flak on social media over the prohibitive costs of the clothes, specially the saris. Many called the designs dull, comparing them to something their grandmothers would wear.

In another incident, fashion giant Gucci sold an Indian kurta for Rs 2.5 lakh recently, inviting mockery and disbelief from social media. The brand was once again in the news after a mother’s reaction to her daughter’s purchase of a Gucci belt worth Rs 35,000 went viral.



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India holds first talks with Taliban, raises issues of safe evacuation and terrorism

Indian envoy to Qatar Deepak Mittal on Tuesday met Taliban leader Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai in Doha, first high-level contact between the two sides on a day the United States completed withdrawal of its troops from Afghanistan.

The Ministry of External Affairs said Ambassador Mittal raised India's concern at the meeting that Afghanistan's soil should not be used for anti-Indian activities and terrorism in any manner.

It said the discussions focused on safety, security and early return of Indian nationals stranded in Afghanistan as well as the travel of Afghan nationals wishing to come to India.

The MEA said the Taliban leader assured Mittal that these issues would be positively addressed.

"Today, Ambassador of India to Qatar, Deepak Mittal, met Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, the Head of Taliban's Political Office in Doha," the MEA said in a release.

It said the meeting took place at the Embassy of India, Doha, on the request of the Taliban side.

"Discussions focused on safety, security and early return of Indian nationals stranded in Afghanistan. The travel of Afghan nationals, especially minorities, who wish to visit to India also came up," the MEA said.

"Ambassador Mittal raised India's concern that Afghanistan's soil should not be used for anti-Indian activities and terrorism in any manner," it added.

With inputs from PTI



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Watch: Popular Afghan singer Sharafat Parwani's emotional song about homeland goes viral

As thousands of people have been evacuated by the United States and other countries from the war-torn country Afghanistan, a video of pain and despair is currently going viral. A popular Afghan singer Sharafat Parwani can be seen singing about his homeland and Afghans’ agony in a video that is making headlines.

The clip was shared by New York Times reporter Sharif Hassan on his social media handle on 29 August. In the video, Parwani can be seen sitting on metallic stairs with a few fellow men around him. In his post, Hassan explains the lyrics of the song that Parwani is captured singing in the video.

“You're tired of anguish, my homeland. You're without song and melody, my homeland. You're pained but without medicine, my homeland,” he explains. Meanwhile, Parwani is currently somewhere in the United States, either at a refugee camp or a military base, as per Hassan.

Watch the video below:

The song that Parwani sings in the video seems to be a sad melody where he is expressing himself longing for homeland. As he continues to sing, few fellow men are seen clapping and humming with him. Further in the video, Parwani is seen reaching out to the metallic shutter beside him and begins striking it with his fingers in a way that produces a sound that matches his song.

As the video went viral, social media users express sympathy with him (singer) and the Afghan people who had to run from their own country. Many in the comment section stated that despite not being unable to understand the language, they can still feel the sadness in the song.



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Maharashtra rains: Last leg of southwest monsoon floods state; one injured in Mumbai landslide

Several districts of Maharashtra experienced water-logging due to heavy downpours on Tuesday. As per officials, the southwest monsoon has again become active in Mumbai after a long gap, bringing heavy rains to the city and neighbouring areas and causing a landslide, injuring one person.

Earlier, India Meteorological Department (IMD) had predicted thunderstorms with light to moderate intensity rain over and adjoining areas of isolated places of Mumbai, moderate rain in the suburbs with the possibility of heavy falls at isolated places during the next 24 hours.

"Due to a low-pressure area over western parts of Vidarbha, rainfall activity over Mumbai and its suburbs would continue during next 24 hours leading to moderate rain at most places with heavy to very heavy rainfall (less than 15cm) at isolated places," IMD said in its tweet at 7 am.

Mumbai Suburban

One person was injured in a landslide reported in the Saki Naka area of Mumbai, an official from the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) said on Tuesday. The incident, which took place in the early hours of Tuesday, saw some stones fall on top of a house near a public toilet on GMM Road in Saki Naka, an official said. A 47-year-old man sustained injuries and was rushed to a nearby civic hospital, where he was treated and discharged later, the official added.

Mumbai

In a separate incident, rocks tumbled down the hill at Ambedkar Nagar in Kurar village around 10.15 am, as heavy rains lashed the western suburbs. While no one was injured in the incident, as a precautionary measure, the BMC shifted 100 people from the locality to a municipal school in Parekh Nagar, another official said. Personnel from the local civic ward and forest department have been mobilised to the spot to avoid any untoward incident, the official added.

Jalgaon

Meanwhile, one person has been killed in the floods that have engulfed villages in Chalisgaon, Jalgaon district on Tuesday. Chalisgaon MLA Mangesh Chauhan said, "Due to the torrential rains, 10 villages of Chalisgaon area have witnessed floods. Also, it is being estimated that about 10-15 people have been washed away in the floods. One person has died and one is seriously injured."

The administration estimates that around 700-800 animals have died due to the floods, he added

Bhagwat Patil, traffic in charge, said, "Due to the night rain, Jalgaon Ghat has collapsed and cracks have come in many places, due to which the entire traffic has come to a halt, the work of removal is going on and the public is advised not to come from this route. Traffic was diverted from Nandgaon."

Aurangabad

Several parts of Kannad taluka of Aurangabad district were inundated due to incessant rains in the last 24 hours. Rains caused a lake in Bhildari village to overflow, leading to water-logging in the nearby areas, the official said.

Government agencies are facing hurdles to reach the village for relief work, Kannad tehsildar Sanjay Warkad said. Out of eight circles in Kannad taluka, seven have received excess rainfall of over 65 mm in the last 24 hours, the official said.

Crops losses have been reported at Naagad and Saygavhan villages, while rainwater entered houses in Pishor circle, he said.

Meanwhile, a truck transporting cattle fell to nearly 100 feet in Autram Ghat. "The truck transporting buffaloes fell nearly 100 feet from the road. A search is on for the truck driver," inspector KK Patil from Jalgaon police told PTI.

Parbhani

Excess rainfall was recorded in parts of Hadgaon Budruk and nearby villages in Pathri of Parbhani district, leading to loss of crops and property, an official said.

Nanded

In a rain-related mishap, two women drowned in a canal in Sawargaon of Loha taluka in Nanded district, an official said. Mankabai Dagadgave (52) was swept away by heavy currents in a canal. A search is on for Parvatibai Dagadgave (45), whose body is yet to be recovered, he added.

Nashik

IMD has warned of torrential to very heavy rains in Nashik in the next 24 hours.

With inputs from PTI



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TPSC JA and SA exam 2021: Hall tickets released at tspsc.gov.in; check direct link here

The admit cards for the post of Senior Assistant (SA) and Junior Assistant (JA) cum Typist have been released by the Telangana State Public Service Commission (TSPSC) on 31 August. The registered candidates can now check and download their hall tickets by visiting the official website at tspsc.gov.in.

Applicants should note that the admit cards have been issued for the post of Senior Assistant (SA) and Junior Assistant (JA) cum Typist in PV Narsimha Rao Telangana Veterinary University and Junior Assistant cum Typist in Professor Jayashankar Telangana State Agriculture University.

The TSPSC has scheduled to conduct the Senior Assistant (SA) and Junior Assistant (JA) examinations on 6 September at various centres across the state. To obtain the hall ticket, applicants need to use their IDs and date of birth.

Candidates can follow these steps to download admit card:

Step 1: Go to the official website of TSPC -- https://tspsc.gov.in/

Step 2: Search and click on the link given to download the hall ticket on the homepage

Step 3: As a new page opens, candidates need to click on the link and submit all the credentials correctly

Step 4: Soon after submission of details, the admit card will be displayed on the screen

Step 5: Applicants are advised to keep a hard copy of the same for future use or reference

Here’s the direct link: https://ift.tt/3DxYfCc

On the day of the exam, candidates are requested to carry along a photocopy of the hall ticket. All COVID-19 protocols will be strictly maintained at the examination venue.

This year a large number of candidates have applied for the post of Senior Assistant (SA) and Junior Assistant (JA) cum Typist.

For more details and updates related to the examination, applicants are requested to keep a check on the official website -- https://tspsc.gov.in/



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SAI Recruitment 2021: Application process for 100 coach vacancies is now open; check direct link here

The Sports Authority of India (SAI) has opened its applications window for the appointment of coaches on a contract basis. As per the latest update, these coaches will be recruited for an initial period of four years that will be subjected to yearly performance evaluation.

Aspirants can apply for the post by visiting the official website of SAI -- sportsauthorityofindia.nic.in and the last date for submission of the application form is 15 October. Candidates should note that the coaches will be recruited for 21 sports disciplines.

Direct link to apply: https://ift.tt/3jcDWCc

Here are the various disciplines and vacancies available:
-- 7 each for Archery, Boxing, Cycling, Fencing, Hockey, Judo, Rowing, Shooting, Weightlifting, and Wrestling
-- 10 for Athletics
-- 2 each for Basketball, Football, Gymnastics, Kabaddi, Kayaking and Canoeing, Swimming, Table Tennis, Taekwondo, Volleyball, Wushu

According to the notification, out of 100 vacancies, 41 are for the unreserved category, 27 for Other Backward Classes (OBC), 15 for Scheduled Tribe (ST), 7 for Scheduled Caste (SC), and 10 for the Economically Weaker Section.

Eligibility criteria

Candidates must hold a Diploma in Coaching from SAI and Netaji Subhas National Institute of Sports (NSNIS) or from any other recognised Indian or foreign university. They should also have won a medal in the Olympic or World Championship or at least have participated in the Olympics twice and have international participation. Moreover, those who have been awarded the Dronacharya Award are qualified for this post.

The maximum age limit on the last day of submission of the application form is 45 years.

Selection process

Eligible candidates will be selected through an interview which includes oral tests for discipline specific knowledge. Meanwhile, the list of shortlisted candidates for the interview along with the place and date of interview will be posted on the SAI website.



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CMA Foundation June 2021 Exam: ICMAI releases test guidelines; download admit cards at icmai.in

The guidelines for the CMA Foundation June 2021 examination have been released by the Institute of Cost Accountants India (ICMAI). Candidates, appearing for the examination scheduled to be conducted on 5 September, can now download their admit cards from the official website at icmai.in.

The examination will be held online in home mode. The ICMAI has advised candidates to ensure an internet connection with speeds between 1 and 3 MBPS. It has also asked applicants to ensure their laptops or tablets have Google Chrome browser, Adobe Flash player, webcam, microphone, and operating system of Windows 7 and above or Android 5 and above.

The applicants have to download and install the CoCubes Assessment and Safe Assessment Browser tool for their systems before the start of the exam.

Important guidelines for CMA Foundation June 2021 exam:

Before the exam:

Candidates have to enter “cma2021” in the assessment URL of the online assessment tool and use their personal details to log in.

The candidate’s photo would be captured using the webcam. They have to upload a valid identity proof or their institute’s id card to receive their invigilator’s contact details.

During the exam:

Candidates will be under strict surveillance at the time of the test. They are advised to remain seated for the duration of the test, i.e. two hours.

Students are advised not to attempt to forcefully stop the session or press the refresh or backspace key. If they exit the session, they will not be allowed to re-enter the examination.

The applicants are allowed to non-scientific calculator, pen, rough sheet, and logbook during the exam.

After the exam:

Save the submission page onscreen after you have completed the examination.

Do not appear for the test before or after the exam time. The login process is deactivated after a single use.

There will be no negative marking conducted in the 100 Multiple Choice Question (MCQs) test. All questions have to be attempted by the candidates. ICMAI will reserve the right to admission.



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Improvement Examinations 2021: BSEH declares schedule for Classes 10 and 12; check them at bseh.org.in

The Board of School Education Haryana (BSEH) has announced the schedule for the Classes 10 and 12 improvement examinations for this year. Candidates can view the official notification at the website of the BSEH - https://bseh.org.in/.

Here is the direct link to notification:  https://bseh.org.in/uploads/files/8f18b27df523fda44ea627966c17660c.jpeg

The examination for Class 12 students will commence from 7 September and end on 22 September; for Class 10 students, the examinations will be held from 7 to 18 September. English would be the first exam for Class 12 and Hindi for Class 10.

Class 12 applicants would end the schedule with a final paper of Sanskrit/Urdu/Punjabi. Meanwhile, Class 10 students will end their exams earlier on 18 August with the same subjects lined up for assessment, along with computer science, physical education and home science.

According to the notification, candidates are required to bring their own trigonometry tables, logs and stencils for maps for the exams. They can use colour pencils only for the science papers. No calculators and mobile phones would be permitted inside the exam centres.

Due to the continuing pandemic, all candidates have to follow COVID-19 protocols, including wearing a face mask, carrying a bottle of hand sanitiser and maintaining social distancing.

The improvement exams were open to candidates who were dissatisfied with their results. The registrations to appear for the examinations were conducted from 17 to 27 August.

The BSEH had registered a pass percentage of 100 percent when it declared its results in July. Out of the 2,21,263 candidates who had taken the Class 12 examinations, 1,06,847 candidates were girls and 1,14,416  were boys.

The exam results were calculated on the basis of an alternative system of grading since the physical exams were cancelled due to the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic. The students were marked on the basis of their Classes 10 and 11 final marks and the Class 12 internal assessments.



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Zomato defends Hrithik Roshan ad, says aimed to make delivery agents 'the hero'

After days of receiving negative feedback on social media, food ordering and delivery platform Zomato has finally responded to the company's latest advertisements featuring Bollywood stars Hrithik Roshan and Katrina Kaif.

The company has released a statement where they have defended the latest ads and also addressed some of the issues that viewers had with them.

“We believe that our ads are well-intentioned, but were unfortunately misinterpreted by some people," the statement by Zomato reads. Responding to criticism, the delivering platform asserted that the ads were conceptualised six months ago even before “any social media chatter around gig worker payouts or working conditions” came up.

Further, in its statement, Zomato asserted the main focus of these advertisements was to make delivery partners the hero of the ads. They also wanted to highlight that common people should talk respectfully to delivery partners and raise the level of dignity associated with them. Finally, they wanted to showcase that every customer is a star for its company.

Check out the statement below:

Days ago, Zomato released two ads on a similar idea; one where Katrina Kaif asks the Zomato delivery partner to wait for a few minutes for a piece of her birthday cake. As she goes to get it for him, the delivery partner’s phone pings with a notification for another food order that needs to be delivered. Following this, he leaves the place.

The second ad also comes with a similar concept, where a Zomato delivery partner is shocked to know that he came to deliver an order and sees Hrithik Roshan face to face. As the Krrish actor asks him to wait for a selfie, the delivery partner's phone rings for another order to be delivered. Following this, the delivery partner happily forgoes his chance for a selfie with Roshan.

Ever since these ads have been released on social media, they were slammed and criticized for being tone-deaf after unfair treatment of gig workers have come under scrutiny.



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Rajasthan DEIEd 2021 deferred; exams to be held from 2-21 September

Rajasthan's department of elementary education has postponed the state diploma in elementary education ((DEIEd) 2021 examination.

Informing candidates about the same, the department took to its social media handle and stated that the DElEd examination has been postponed after taking Pre-Teacher Education Test (PTET) and SI examination into consideration.

“In view of the conduct of the examination of PTET and SI, the revised schedule of DElEd, the first and second year 2021 examinations have been announced,” the department tweeted on its social media handle. The department also released its revised schedule on its Twitter handle. Check the tweets below:

As per schedule, the DEIEd examination will begin on 2 September and end on 21 September. This state-level examination will be conducted in two shifts. The first shift will begin from 9.30 am to 12.30 pm and the second shift will be from 2.30 pm to 5.30 pm.

The department will conduct the examination while following all COVID-19 protocols and measures issued by the state and central government.

Take a look at a few guidelines below:

  1. Only a few papers in the respective examination will have a duration of two hours
  2. Before the commencement of the exam, students will be given 15 minutes time to read the question papers
  3. Practical examination for the first and second year of Rajasthan DElEd will be held from 28 September to 6 October
  4. The Pre-DEIEd examinations are scheduled to be held today, 31 August. The timing for the exam is from 2.00 pm to 5.00 pm at various districts across the state. The admit cards for the same were earlier issued on the department’s portal

For the unversed, Pre DEIEd examination is a two-year diploma programme in elementary education that is provided by the department of elementary education of Rajasthan.

Exam Pattern

In this examination, there are multiple choice questions (MCQ), which will consist 200 questions. There will be no negative marking for wrong answers, but the correct answer will carry a weightage of three marks each.



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DMK MLA's son, daughter-in-law among seven killed in Bengaluru car crash

Seven people were killed in a car crash in Bengaluru, including the son and daughter-in-law of a Tamil Nadu MLA, in the early hours of Tuesday. Karuna Sagar, the son of DMK MLA Y Prakash, and his wife Bindu were killed in the car crash.

According to police, the accident happened in the Koramangala area between 1 and 2 am. An Audi Q3, with a VIP license plate, carrying seven passengers, none of whom were wearing seatbelts, went over a footpath and crashed into the building of a Punjab National Bank branch. CCTV footage shows the car smashing into the wall with great speed, leading to one of its wheel flying off.

According to police, the accident happened because the driver lost control over the car. All passengers were in their twenties and are believed to be out on a joyride. According to reports, the airbags did not deploy on impact.

The crash led to the car being completely wrecked. The front part of the vehicle was mangled due to the impact of the accident.

While six people, including three women, died on the spot, one person died in the hospital.  While Sagar and his wife were identified as two of the casualties, further confirmation is awaited for the identities of other passengers.

Joint commissioner of police (traffic) Ravikanthe Gowda said that prima facie evidence suggests that the car was being driven in a rash and negligent manner. Gowda added that the police were “yet to know” if the passengers were drunk.

The bodies have been shifted for post-mortem to St John’s hospital. A case of negligent and rash driving has been registered by Adugodi traffic police.



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DU undergraduate admissions 2021: Last day to register at www.du.ac.in

Registrations for Delhi University (DU) undergraduate (UG) courses 2021 will conclude today, 31 August. Candidates can register themselves by visiting the university’s official website http://www.du.ac.in/.

Aspirants can follow these steps to register for DU undergraduate courses 2021:

  1. Go to the official website of DU - http://www.du.ac.in/
  2. Click on the 'study at DU' link that is available on the homepage
  3. A new window will open. Select the undergraduate admissions link
  4. Register yourself using your personal details and log in to complete the application
  5. Upload the necessary documents and pay the fee
  6. Submit your application and download the confirmation page for the future

The admission is open to all students who have completed their Class 12 exam. The first merit list is expected to come out in the second week of September.

About 70,000 seats are up for grabs at 60 colleges. The courses are divided into two groups on the basis of the admission process — merit-based and entrance test-based. Candidates are requested to check the information prospectus available at the website to check which category their course falls into.

The registration fee for merit-based programmes is Rs 300 for unreserved, Other Backward Castes (OBC), and Economically Weaker Section (EWS) candidates. For Scheduled Caste (SC), Scheduled Tribe (ST), and Persons with Benchmark Disability (PwBD), the fee is Rs 100. For entrance exams-based courses, the fee is Rs 750 for unreserved, EWS, and OBC candidates while it is Rs 300 for SC, ST, and PwBD applicants.

Admissions to the undergraduate merit-based courses will be based on cut-offs. The decision was taken after the proposed Central Universities Common Entrance Test (CUCET) was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

For 12 undergraduate courses, the National Testing Agency (NTA) will conduct the Delhi University Entrance Test (DUET). The examination will be held online.  The detailed schedule will be announced soon by the NTA.



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Mumbai University admission 2021: Third UG merit list out; check cut-off list at mu.ac.in

The third merit list for admissions to various undergraduate (UG) programmes has been released by Mumbai University (MU). Candidates, who were not selected in the first and second lists, can now check the third list by visiting the official website https://mu.ac.in/.

Along with this, candidates can also access the merit list through the websites of respective colleges. Meanwhile, a few colleges, including Tolani College of Commerce, have already released the cut-off on their official website for this year. As for the open category, the cut-off for BCom courses is 495 and for BSc (IT), it is 35 (out of 600).

According to reports, the cut-off for BK Birla College of Arts, Science and Commerce for BSc (PCM) is 61 percent, BA (Marathi Medium) is 50 percent, BA (English Medium) is 65 percent, BSc (IT) is 85 percent and BSc (CBZ) is 56 percent.

Candidates should note that they will be able to check the minimum scores mentioned for each programme in the third merit list. After students calculate their marks with the cut-off scores eligibility in the third merit list, they are requested to generate the admission form for the counselling rounds and wait for the invite.

Students can follow these steps to check the merit list:

Step 1: Go to the official site of Mumbai University - https://mu.ac.in/

Step 2: Search and click on the Mumbai University Admission 2021 link that is made available on the homepage

Step 3: Candidates need to enter their login details correctly and click on submit

Step 4: Within a few seconds, the merit list will be displayed on the screen

As per the schedule, the fee payment and online document verification will be conducted from 1 to 4 September. The first and second merit lists were released earlier this month.

For more details and updates, candidates are requested to check the official website of Mumbai University.



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In a first, 9 Supreme Court judges take oath in one go; working strength goes up to 33

Nine new judges, including three women, were on Tuesday administered oath of office as judges of the Supreme Court, taking its strength to 33.

It is for the first time in the history of the apex court that nine judges took oath of office at one go.

Chief Justice of India N V Ramana administered the oath of office to the new judges in a swearing-in ceremony held in the auditorium of the Supreme Court's additional building complex.

With the swearing-in of the nine new judges, the strength of the Supreme Court has risen to 33, including the Chief Justice of India, out of the sanctioned strength of 34.

The nine new judges who were administered oath of office as apex court judges include Justice Abhay Shreeniwas Oka, Justice Vikram Nath, Justice Jitendra Kumar Maheshwari, Justice Hima Kohli and Justice B V Nagarathna.

Besides them, Justice C T Ravikumar, Justice M M Sundresh, Justice Bela M Trivedi and Justice P S Narasimha, who was a senior advocate and former Additional Solicitor General, were also administered oath of office by the CJI.

Justice Nagarathna, the daughter of former CJI E S Venkataramiah, is in line to become the first woman CJI in September 2027.

Three out of these nine new judges -- Justices Nath, Nagarathna and Narasimha -- are also in line to become the CJI.

Traditionally, the oath of office to new judges is administered in the CJI's court room but the swearing-in ceremony was shifted to the auditorium keeping in view the need for strict adherence to COVID-19 norms, a press release issued by the apex court's public relations office on Monday had said.

Before the administration of oath of office, the warrant of appointment issue by President Ram Nath Kovind was read during the swearing-in ceremony.

Justice Nath is in line to become the CJI upon retirement of sitting apex court judge Justice Surya Kant in February 2027.

Justice Nath would be succeeded by Justice Nagarathna, who would have a tenure of over a month as the head of the judiciary.

Justice Narasimha would succeed Justice Nagarathna as the CJI and would have a tenure of over six months.

The apex court collegium had on 17 August recommended these nine names for appointment as judges of the top court.

Later, the President had signed the warrants of their appointment as apex court judges.

The top court, which came into being on 26 January 1950, has seen very few women judges since its inception and in the last over 71 years has appointed only eight lady judges starting from M Fathima Beevi in 1989.

Presently, Justice Indira Banerjee was the lone serving woman judge in the apex court after her elevation on 7 August 2018 from the Madras High Court where she was serving as the Chief Justice.

While high court judges retire at the age of 62, the retirement age of Supreme Court judges is 65.

The recommendation of these nine names by the five-member collegium headed by CJI Ramana at its meeting on 17 August had put an end to the 21-month-long logjam over appointment of new judges to the top court.

The impasse over the appointment had led to a situation in which not a single name for the judgeship in the apex court could be recommended after the superannuation of then CJI Ranjan Gogoi on 17 November 2019.

With inputs from PTI



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JNUEE 2021: Registrations to close today at 5 pm; check details at jnuexams.nta.ac.in

Registrations for the Jawaharlal Nehru University Entrance Examination (JNUEE) 2021 will conclude today, 31 August, at 5 pm. Interested candidates can register themselves at the official website - https://jnuexams.nta.ac.in/.

The JNUEE 2021 will be conducted by the National Testing Agency (NTA) from 20 to 23 September. It will be a computer-based examination. The admit cards will be issued on 8 September.

The exam will be held in two shifts; each shift will have a duration of three hours. The medium of instruction for all papers, with the exception of language courses, will be English. There will be no negative marking. The paper will consist of 100 multiple choice questions (MCQs).

Steps to register for JNUEE 2021:

  1. Go to the official website of JNUEE - https://jnuexams.nta.ac.in/
  2. Click on the link for JNUEE 2021 registration available on the homepage
  3. A new page will appear. Register yourself using your personal details
  4. Login and proceed with the JNUEE 2021 application
  5. Upload the documents needed for completing the application and pay the registration fee
  6. Submit your application and save a copy of it

Here’s the direct link to register: https://jnuexams.nta.ac.in/jnueereg2021/regprocess.aspx

Candidates are requested to view the information brochure available at the website to get detailed information about aspects like eligibility, syllabus, admission procedure, and examination centres.

The correction window for the applications will be open from 1 to 3 September.

The exam is held for admissions into various undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral courses at JNU. The registrations for the entrance exam had been extended till 31 August to allow for greater participation in the test. The minimum age limit for the exam is 17 years as on 1 October 2021 for the BA (Hons) programme. There is no maximum age limit.

This year, a total of 3,016 seats are vacant at the premier educational institute. Out of these, 982 seats are available for undergraduate courses and 1,582 for postgraduate courses. For the PhD candidates, 451 seats are vacant across various disciplines.



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Monday, 30 August 2021

Karnataka allows Classes 6 to 8 to reopen from 6 September but conditions apply

As the daily COVID-19 cases have declined in Karnataka, the state government has decided to reopen schools for Classes 6 to 8 from 6 September. Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai made this announcement following a meeting with an expert panel and government officials after analysing the coronavirus situation across the state.

Following the discussion, Minister R Ashoka informed that the government has decided to reopen schools in areas with less than 2 percent of positive rates.

As other states are opening schools for Classes 9 to 12, Karnataka decided to do the same for younger classes as well. Meanwhile, for Classes 9 to 12, the schools reopened last week keeping all COVID-19 protocols in mind.

According to a News18 report, a 13-member advisory committee was set up to analyse the coronavirus situation and reopening of schools. As per the government order, the panel then suggested phase-wise reopening of schools.

Below are few guidelines on reopening schools:

  • Classes in Karnataka will be held in batches; the first batch will contain 50 percent of students while the remaining 50 percent will be allowed the following day
  • Classes will reopen for 5 days a week in taluks with a positivity rate below 2 percent following all guidelines directed by the state authorities
  • Wearing face masks and maintaining social distance will be mandatory in schools. However, attending school will not be compulsory for students
  • If need be, parents can request for their child to study online or in physical mode. As both online and offline classes will go simultaneously
  • Schools will remain closed on Saturday and Sunday as a sanitisation process will be undertaken by authorities

Among the many relaxations, Karnataka has begun a few more including one-week quarantine compulsory for people entering from Kerala. Also, relaxation in night curfew has begun in districts barring Udupi, Hassan, Dakshina Kannada, and Kodagu among others.



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GATE 2022: IIT Kharagpur adds papers on naval and marine engineering and geomatics engineering in exam

Two new papers have been added by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kharagpur, in the Graduate Aptitude Test for Engineering (GATE) 2022. The new papers are mentioned as naval and marine engineering (NM) and geomatics engineering (GE).

“The two new papers (GE and NM) will provide direct benefits to graduates in these two areas, especially when the country needs human resources with advanced capabilities in Ship Building Industries and Geo-informatics," a notice on the official website reads.

Further on the website, the institute has explained the new papers (GE and NM) will contain a general aptitude section of 15 marks each in GATE like every other subject.

The GE paper will be divided into two parts that will cover the whole syllabus. Part A will be for 55 marks and the second part (Part B) will contain 30 marks, while NM will have a single section of 85 marks in total.

Here is a model question paper for GE:

https://gate.iitkgp.ac.in/documents/Model_Question_Paper_GE.pdf

Here is a model question paper for NM:

https://gate.iitkgp.ac.in/documents/Model_Question_Paper_NM.pdf

Application

Candidates should note that the applications for GATE 2022 will begin on 2 September and will remain open till 24 September. Additionally, the application process will remain open till 1 October with a late fee . The edit process will begin from 24 October and continue till 1 November. However, the last date to make any changes in the application form is 12 November and applicants will have to pay an extra charge for it. Once the process begins, aspirants can apply by visiting the official website - gate.iitkgp.ac.in.

Eligibility criteria

Applicants need to be in the third year of an undergraduate (UG) course in technology, engineering or have a degree in a relevant science course.

GATE 2022

As per the schedule, IIT Kharagpur will hold the GATE 2022 on 5, 6, 12, and 13 February next year. It will be a computer-based online test. The exams will be held for admission to MTech, integrated MSc courses in IISc, postgraduate (PG) courses across IITs, or government jobs.



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Petrol and diesel prices remain unchanged; here's what you need to pay in your city today

Petrol and diesel prices remained static on Tuesday. In Delhi, petrol costs Rs 101.49 a litre while the rate of diesel was Rs 88.92 per litre.

In Mumbai, petrol can be bought at Rs 107.52 per litre and diesel costs Rs 96.48 for one litre.

In Chennai, a litre of petrol is priced at Rs 99.20. On Tuesday, the price of a litre of diesel was Rs 93.52.

Petrol in Kolkata costs Rs 101.82 per litre while diesel costs Rs 91.98 a litre.

While petrol can be bought at Rs 109.91 in Bhopal and diesel costs Rs 97.72 a litre today.

Petrol and diesel prices are revised by the oil marketing companies including Bharat Petroleum, Indian Oil and Hindustan Petroleum. The new prices are implemented at 6 am every day. States and cities have different fuel prices because of the value-added taxes, local and freight charges which vary depending on the place.

Following are the prices of diesel and petrol in a few metros and Tier-II cities in the country:

1. Mumbai

Petrol - Rs 107.52 per litre
Diesel - Rs 96.48 per litre

2. Delhi

Petrol - Rs 101.49 per litre
Diesel - Rs 88.92 per litre

3. Chennai

Petrol - Rs 99.20 per litre
Diesel - Rs 93.52 per litre

4. Kolkata

Petrol - Rs 101.82 per litre
Diesel - Rs 91.98 per litre

5. Bhopal

Petrol - Rs 109.91 per litre
Diesel - Rs 97.72 per litre

6. Hyderabad

Petrol - Rs 105.54 per litre
Diesel - Rs 96.99 per litre

7. Bangaluru

Petrol - Rs 104.98 per litre
Diesel - Rs 94.34 per litre

8. Guwahati

Petrol - Rs 97.33 per litre
Diesel - Rs 88.29 per litre

9. Lucknow

Petrol - Rs 98.56 per litre
Diesel - Rs 89.29 per litre

10. Gandhinagar

Petrol - Rs 98.52 per litre
Diesel - 96.00 per litre

11. Thiruvananthapuram

Petrol - Rs 103.69 per litre
Diesel - Rs 95.68 per litre



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US couple sends $240 invoice to guests for missing their wedding; netizens express support

In a strange twist of events, a couple from Chicago sent out invoices to their destination wedding and reception guests, who failed to turn up without informing the couple. The duo, identified as Doug Simmons and Dedra McGee, have recently garnered international attention after a social media post of their invoice went viral.

Calling their guests ‘No Call, No Show’, the couple asserted that they would charge the absentee guests $240 (Rs 17,500) for the reception dinner.

Simmons shared the photo of the invoice on Facebook, writing, "it’s gonna look something like this". Asking people not to get offended when they receive the bill, Simmons wrote that he would be sending it through email and certified mail as well. Check out the post below:

Meanwhile, a note on the invoice informed that it was sent to people because the seats count was confirmed at the wedding reception during the final headcount. Also, the amount on the invoice shows the cost of the individual seats.

The invoice also mentioned that as the guests did not call or inform the couple about their attendance, the amount mentioned is what the guest needs to pay. The expense can be paid via Zelle or PayPal. Moreover, the couple whose wedding took place at Royalton Negril Resort and Spa in Jamaica, have given the guest one month’s time period to pay the amount. Check out his second post below:

According to New York Post, the couple came up with this decision after the guests did not show up at their planned dream wedding. The couple had called and asked every guest at least four times about their arrival and attendance. While speaking to NYP, Simmons said that he had to pay a huge amount of money in advance since this was a destination wedding.

The post on social media attracted both praise and criticism by people across the world. There were many who showed their surprise at the couple’s move while others called it tacky.



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Janmashtami menu: From kheer to sabudana khichdi, here are some traditional dishes to prepare on the day

No Indian festival is ever complete without sweets or desserts, and that includes Janmashtami. As the festival is celebrated across the nation today, it remains a special day of merrymaking and eating scrumptious sweets.

Also known as Krishna Janmashtami, the festival is observed every year on the eighth day (Ashmti) of Krishna Paksha (dark fortnight) in the month of Bhadrapad, according to the Hindu calendar. Several special dishes are offered to Lord Krishna on this day, keeping in mind his love for milk and other dairy products.

On this auspicious occasion, here are some dishes which you can prepare and offer to Lord Krishna:

Kheer

This festive dessert is richly flavoured with saffron and cardamom. It is cooked rice, makhana, milk, dried fruits, or sabudana (sago). Considered lip-smacking and filling, it is usually offered to Lord Krishna during the midnight celebration of Janmashtami as part of Chaapan Bhog

Rava Laddoo

Devotees believe that Lord Krishna loves to eat ghee and butter. Prepared with nuts, sugar, grated coconut, roasted rava, dry fruits, and ghee, this healthy and nutritious ladoo is considered best for the occasion.

Panjiri

This sweet dish is supposed to be the most important prasad for Janmashtami. It is prepared with almonds, sugar, cashew nuts, mishri (rock sugar or candy sugar), pistachios, coriander seed powder, ghee and raisins. This healthy dish is believed to be beneficial for the intestines. It is popular in states like Punjab, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.

Sabudana Khichdi

Among the many sweets and desserts prepared during the festival, the sabudana khichdi is considered a healthy snack. It is rich in carbohydrates and can also provide instant energy when fasting. The khichdi is made from soaked sabudana, peanut, ghee, rock salt, tomato and green chilies.

Charnamrit or Panchamrit:

This is a mixture made of fresh milk, tulsi leaves, jaggery or sugar, ghee, curd and makhana. As per Hindu traditions, this mixture is basically used to bathe Lord Krishna at midnight celebrations. Once the rituals end at midnight, this is distributed to devotees as part of prasad.



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Gaurie Dwivedi's Blinkers Off lays out how China will have to be countered in a post-Covid world

Gaurie Dwivedi’s book is a product of synchronicity. It was conceived when the virus from Wuhan was ravaging the world. But she could not have anticipated the unravelling of Afghanistan by the time it was released. It is the latter that adds the third dimension to make Blinkers Off an important work of these troubled times. If COVID-19 took the Blinkers off, as it were, from the way the world looked at China, Afghanistan and the return of the Taliban demolished many long-cultivated myths about the omnipotence of the United States in a post-Cold War era.

While the world was focused on the economic rise of China, Beijing carefully crafted and executed a 360° strategy to change the global order putting itself at the centre. The pandemic has laid bare the multi-layered influence China wields across the world from trade to military, cyberspace and new-age technology. The central thesis of Dwivedi’s book is that the imperialistic designs of China can only be thwarted through a multi-polar configuration going beyond military cooperation — to information, trade and, perhaps — as Covid has shown, biological warfare. Within this framework she explores what can be India’s role in meeting China’s challenge and protecting her own interests.

Gaurie artfully articulates how China used a combination of Confucius and Sun Tzu to, er, confuse the world in its pursuit of global dominance. The CCP used Confucian principles to stop democratic movements in the name of maintaining order. In tandem, it took leaves out of Sun Tzu’s book to start its two-decades-long waiting game to avenge its “century of humiliation”, she writes. As a part of its waiting game, it stuck to Den Xiaoping’s doctrine of 'hide your capacities and bide your time’  and focused on building its economic muscles.

Though copiously researched and tackled in-depth, the first two sections of the book may not cover much new ground for practitioners of geopolitical studies and professional China watchers. But, Gaurie’s achievement lies in putting together the blocks to show how the beast has become more diabolical and larger than the sum of its parts after the pandemic. It is also a timely and valuable primer for those who have so far viewed China as a rising economic and military power, but now waking up to its potential to change the world order faster and more radically than anyone had imagined.

Looking at the previous 20 years with the benefit of 20:20 hindsight, it becomes clear how China moved its pieces on the global chessboard in a cold and calculative manner. The book traces how Beijing has been systematically spreading its tentacles across continents starting from changing the rules of engagement in the Indo-Pacific, tying up economically weaker countries literally under the ‘belt’ with BRI (the Belt and Road Initiative), expanding its footprint into Africa and gaining an unseemly hold over Europe through “cheque-book” diplomacy. China has got Europe into such a vice-like grip with its strategic investments that it is able to exploit the political fault lines between countries and also dictate Europe’s stand on humanitarian issues.

Sitting in India we are aware of how China has been building its web around our neighbourhood with a multipronged approach ranging from overt political interventions to economic diplomacy. What has been less visible to us is China’s foray into the Middle East. While some moves such as the development of Gwadar port in Baluchistan have engaged our attention, China’s more far-reaching penetration has been in Iran - the heart of Central Asia. These were stratagems aimed at altering existing power equations. It is also here that China and Russia have been seen to openly tango. The longer-term implications of this will manifest more clearly in the coming days as the situation in Afghanistan unfolds — with the Taliban already trying to woo the Chinese. It has enormous implications for India as it is dependent on this region for its energy needs.

With 2020 applying the brakes on the world, the book takes a sharp turn from here. In a few chapters, Dwivedi deftly pulls the mask off Xi’s China and outlines how the world realised that it can no longer be business as usual with the Middle Kingdom. The pandemic had exposed Xi’s facade of “a champion of globalization and free trade crusader”.

Subsequent actions of China in the peak of the pandemic on multiple fronts — on the one hand pushing the envelope with India in Galwan, aerial sabre rattling with Taiwan and needling Japan on its territorial waters and on the other arm twisting Australia on trade for merely suggesting an enquiry on the origins and spread of the coronavirus — made it clear to the world that China could no longer be trusted and the need to decouple from it. With that also came the realisation of how China has penetrated the UN and other international organisations like WTO and WHO. Doubts about collusion between Tedros Adhanom, Director-General of WHO, in delaying the announcement of COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan and subsequent response of WHO in determining the global response to the pandemic -- further reinforced these suspicions.

Having ceded ground and wearing blinkers for two decades -- the world has put itself on the backfoot for tackling China. With the Dragon baring its fangs, traditional methods of containing it will no longer work. Strategies have to be reworked and responses reinvented -- going beyond military and trade deterrents.

While the United States will have to be part of the solution, it may not be either the leading or a dependable player. For one, as Afghanistan has shown, its willingness to fight someone else’ war is diminishing. With China projected to be the world’s largest economy by 2028 the US’ economic clout will reduce. The risks of high body count will be a deterrent for Americans. So, alliances have to be re-booted in which India and Japan will have to assert themselves as equal partners in the Quad. Otherwise, as Dwivedi puts it succinctly, the world-map could be one of the casualties.

Impressive in its sweep, this is an ambitious work by Dwivedi. She emerges as a bold new voice outside the echo chambers that have so far dominated the discourse on India’s policy towards China and, indeed, its role in an emerging post-COVID multipolar world.

Blinkers Off
Gaurie Dwivedi
239 Pages
Rs 795
Pentagon Press LLP

The author is a writer, TV current affairs commentator and opinion columnist. He tweets @SandipGhose. Views are personal.



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Kerala Lottery 2022: Akshaya AK-548 lottery result to be declared at 3 pm, first prize Rs 70 lakh

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