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Kingpin of cattle thieves’ gang arrested in Jammu

On the left Cattle thief kingpin, Shabir Ahmed alias Veer of Anantnag district, Kashmir and on his right his aide Balwinder Singh of Raika Labana, Ramgarh, Jammu arrested by Vijaypur Police.
On the left Cattle thief kingpin, Shabir Ahmed alias Veer of Anantnag district, Kashmir and on his right his aide Balwinder Singh of Raika Labana, Ramgarh, Jammu arrested by Vijaypur Police.

                        Kingpin of cattle thieves’ gang arrested in Jammu

Aman Zutshi


Jammu:
Police has arrested from Samba the kingpin of cattle thieves’ gang in Jammu, who used to stole cattle with his aide in the area, yesterday.

As per report,  A police team was constituted which comprised of SDPO, Vijaypur, Priyanka Kumari, SHO, Tribhuvan Khajuria under the supervision of Additional SP, Samba, Surinder Choudhary  to nab the two accused ,who from a while were indulged in bovine stealing and smuggling in Samba.

Also Read: Earthquake tremors felt in parts of Jammu and Kashmir

The culprits in the dead of the night used to break the cowsheds of the local residents and then load the bovines in their vehicle to trade them, the report said.

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The Vijaypur police acting on their inputs gathered the clues from the aforementioned area and after poring over the CCTV footage apprehended the two perpetrators.

Notorious thief has been identified as Shabir Ahmed alias Veer, son of Mohd Yousaf of Dandipora village, Anantnag district, Kashmir and his aide has been identified as Balwinder Singh son of Foja Singh of Raika Labana, Ramgarh, Jammu, they had been committing thefts in Samba, but used to escape from the clutches of police every time.

The police has also seized a vehicle from their possession, which the culprits used in the commission of crime.

Further investigation of the case is still going on.

Earthquake tremors felt in parts of Jammu and Kashmir

earthquake
earthquake

An earthquake of magnitude 3.9 struck Jammu and Kashmir on Sunday morning, according to the National Center for Seismology (NCS).
The NCS in a tweet said that the 3.9-magnitude earthquake struck north of J&K capital Srinagar at 6:57 am. There were no immediate reports of damage from J&K.
The J&K earthquake was reported by the NCS shortly after two earthquakes were reported in Afghanistan-Tajikistan region. The NCS in another tweet shared that a 4.3-magnitude earthquake struck the region of Tajikistan bordering Afghanistan at 6:10 am.
The NCS said, “Earthquake of Magnitude:4.3 occurred on 05-03-2023, 06:10:37 IST, Lat: 37.72 & Long: 73.48, Depth: 10 Km, Location: 267km ENE of Fayzabad.”
A second earthquake also struck Afghanistan just before the J&K earthquake, according to United States Geological Survey (USGS).
The USGS earthquake tracker shows a 4.1-magnitude earthquake struck northern Afghanistan bordering Tajikistan at 6:56 am IST — just a minute before the J&K earthquake reported by NCS.
Late on Saturday night, another earthquake of magnitude 4.1 was struck the same region, according to NCS.

Latest Weather Report of Jammu-Kashmir: Click Here

Representational photo
Representational photo

Latest Weather Report of Jammu-Kashmir

Meteorological office on Sunday predicted partly cloudy skies with intermittent light rain at isolated places and light snow over higher reaches of Kashmir division during the next 24 hours.

The weather will mainly remain clear to partly cloudy but dry during the next week till March 12 and there is possibility of appreciable rise in day temperature from today onwards in Jammu and Kashmir, MeT office said.

It has also warned the people to stay alert and stay away from avalanche prone areas of Jammu and Kashmir.

Srinagar, the summer capital of Jammu and Kashmir, on Sunday recorded a low of 7.4 degree Celsius which was 5.2 degree Celsius above normal against the normal of 2.2 degree Celsius during this period of the season.

The maximum temperature in Srinagar was recorded at 16.6 degree Celsius and it was 3.5 degree Celsius above normal for the summer capital.

 

Jammu: District Hospital granted 5 DNB seats

District Hospital Udhampur
District Hospital Udhampur
                                 Jammu: District Hospital granted 5 DNB seats

The District Hospital Udhampur was today granted 5 seats in DNB by National Board of Examination In Medical Sciences (NBEMS).

Assessment of the departments was conducted by different teams of Assessors in 2022 and after meeting the prescribed criteria and parameters the seats were granted in Department of Pediatrics (1 Post MBBS DNB and 1 Post Diploma), Orthopedics (1 Post MBBS DNB and 1 Post Diploma) and one in General Medicine.

”All this was possible due to the guidance of Administrative Secretary Bhupinder Kumar, Director General Health Services Jammu Dr. Salim-ur-Rahman, Nodal Officer DNB Dr Jitendra Mehta and support of CMO Udhampur Dr Vijay Basnotra.

 

 

Protesting Kashmiri Pandits employees ‘surrender’, call off strike

Kashmiri Pandit government employees demanding relocation outside the Kashmir Valley in the wake of targeted killings by militants, suspended their 310 days long strike, saying they were “surrendering” as authorities had “stopped” their salaries.

The protesters comprised Kashmiri Pandits working in different government departments under a prime minister’s employment package, report said.

The Jammu and Kashmir administration has neither accepted nor rejected the demand but the protest had to be suspended as stopping of salaries is “choking us financially”, protesters affiliated to the All Migrant (Displaced) Employees Association Kashmir (AMEAK) said.

Last year in May, following the killing of their colleagues Rahul Bhat and Rajini Bala by militants, many had also moved to Jammu from the Kashmir division of the Union Territory. While Bhat was shot dead inside his office in central Kashmir’s Budgam on May 12, Bala, a school teacher, was gunned down in south Kashmir’s Kulgam district on May 31 last year.

The employees said the core committee of AMEAK will meet to take a decision over resuming their duties in the Kashmir Valley.

“We have unanimously decided to suspend the ongoing agitation and are surrendering before the government. We have projected our demand for relocation but the government neither accepted nor rejected our demand,” senior member of AMEAK Ruban Saproo told reporters.

He said since Jammu and Kashmir Lt Governor Manoj Sinha had time and again assured a secure atmosphere to them in the Kashmir Valley, the core committee of the organisation decided to suspend the agitation and wait for the government’s response.

Rohit Raina, an AMEAK member, said that “we have only suspended the protest and the next course of action will be decided by the core committee of AMEAK”.

“Our only concern for which we had fled the Valley is our security,” he said, accusing the administration of twisting arms by stopping their salaries.

The killing of Kashmiri Pandit Sanjay Sharma by militants in south Kashmir’s Pulwama district on February 27 reflects the ground situation but “we hope that the government will ensure our security in the Valley”, Raina said.

Neha, who was part of the protest, said they are left with no option but to “surrender” before the government after it “stopped their salaries”.

“We do not feel safe there (in Kashmir) but nobody is listening to us. The government exploited the employees by stopping our salaries and choking us financially,” she said.

RK Bhat, the president of Youth All India Kashmiri Samaj (YAIKS), an organisation of Kashmiri Pandits, urged Kashmiri Muslims to come forward to ensure the security of minority Hindus living in the Valley.

“The real custodian of ensuring the safety and security of the miniscule Kashmiri Pandit population in the Valley is the majority community and they have to ensure it to maintain real Kashmiriyat. Kashmiriyat is meaningless until and unless Kashmiri civil leaders, political leaders and religious preachers do not publicly and consistently denounce killings of Pandits,” Bhat told reporters here.

He said Kashmiri Pandits belonged to Kashmir and the central government should involve grassroot level leadership of the community for preparing a blueprint for their return and rehabilitation in the Valley.

“We hope the J&K Reorganization Bill, 2019, will end our miseries and reconnect our lost roots and ancestral motherland soon. We hope the process of delimitation and new arrangements should make (Kashmiri) Pandits politically empowered democratically,” he said.

Bhat also appealed to various Kashmiri Pandit groups to unite for their rights.

“At this crucial time when our own people are again being killed, we have to rise above party lines, personal interests and affiliations to form a ‘joint action committee’ of all (Kashmiri) Pandit organisations globally and work for comprehensive rehabilitation of the entire community,” he said.

He said the community needs to be united and speak in one voice for a dignified return to their roots in the Valley. (PTI)

 

35% men, 5.1% women use tobacco in J-K, cigarette consumption highest

Around 21 percent adults in Jammu and Kashmir are using that tobacco even as authorities have taken slew of measures to decrease the percentage of tobacco consumption in the erstwhile state.

As per GATS-2 data, 35.2 percent men and 5.1 percent women and 20.8 percent of all adults smoke tobacco in J-K.

As per the data , 6.8 percent men, 1.5 percent women and 4.3 percent of all adults currently use smokeless tobacco, while 39.7 percent men and 6.2 percent women and 23.7 percent of all adults either smoke tobacco or use smokeless Tobacco.

The National Health and Family Survey-5 (NHFS-5) data reveals nearly one-third (32%) of men, but only 1 percent of women, age 15-49 use some form of tobacco.

“Tobacco products mostly used by men are cigarettes (27%), bidis (4%), hookah and cigars or pipe (2% each). Among women and men, the use of any form of tobacco is slightly higher in rural areas (1.4% for women and 35% for men) than in urban areas (0.7% for women and 24% for men),” the data adds.

Meanwhile, top health officials said that slew of measures have been taken to decrease the percentage of tobacco consumption in the UT even as they claim that percentage has started going down due to the efforts of the National Tobacco Control Programme launched by the government.

We have taken steps to reach out to the people and make them aware about the hazardous effects on their health, they said, adding that the overall consumption of tobacco and cigarette smoking has declined.

Dr Mir Mushtaq, spokesperson Directorate of Health Services Kashmir said that during the year 2022-23, at least 6624 tobacco users received counselling besides that 2109 users received counselling and pharmacotherapy while 147 persons quit tobacco use.

He said that various awareness programmes have been already started to educate people about the hazards of tobacco chewing and smoking besides that officials have been directed to conduct regular enforcement drives for implementation of COTPA-2003.

Notably ,the government of Jammu and Kashmir has also imposed a complete ban on the sale of loose cigarettes, loose beedis and loose tobacco while all educational institutions and tourist destinations were declared as tobacco free zones.

Pertinently tobacco is said to be the leading cause of preventable deaths in the world. It kills approximately more than seven million globally and more than one million in India.

Similarly, lung cancer has been found to be the second commonest cancer. In the past few decades, the cancer catastrophe has created havoc globally, Kashmir has witnessed rise in cases of lung and breast cancers.

As per the hospital-based data from Kashmir valley males have higher incidence of lung cancer while females fall victim of breast cancers.

There is a direct relation between length of smoking and number of cigarettes smoked per day. Even if smokers quit smoking there are chances of developing cancer but these chances decrease to a greater extent, officials said.

 

Kashmiri Pandits call off protest in Jammu

Several Kashmiri Pandit employees agitating.
Several Kashmiri Pandit employees agitating.

                          Kashmiri Pandits call off protest in Jammu


Aman Zutshi

Jammu: The protesting PM package employees on Saturday called off their several months long protest in Jammu saying that they will go back to their duties in Kashmir as they’re not able to continue their agitation because they have no financial sources left to sustain themselves without their salaries.

The employees were on a sit-in protest since the killing of Rahul Bhat, one of their employee who was killed in the month May last year at his government office in central Kashmir and Rajni Bala, a govt teacher, after which nearly all the Kashmiri migrant employees fled to Jammu.

Also Read: Jammu: School students stage protest over absence of teachers 

“We have not decided whether to go Kashmir or not, but temporarily we’re suspending our agitation”. said Ranjan Jotshi, vice-president of All Migrant Displaced Employees Association Kashmir (AMDEAK).

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“We have surrendered ourselves in front of this regime because we’re govt employees and we are not able to fight this powerful regime, from more than 300 days we have been narrating our ordeal to the govt”, he added.

“This administration has not given any chance to the agitating employees to put their demands freely, we have demanded relocation and attachment to Jammu till the situation becomes conducive in the valley”, he alleged.

“The govt even after more than 300 days has not paid any heed to our concerns, that’s why we’re surrendering ourselves to this powerful govt”, he remarked.

“The LG sir has told us several times that their gates are open for us 24hrs, but we received no aid”, he said.

“The employees are helpless and have been financially choked, no one supported us. We tried our best to put forward our issues to show the ground reality to the govt, so that we can be saved”, one of the protestors said.

“If we stay here our whole family will die and if we join there only an employee will die. Now, it is the job of govt to save our lives”, he added.

“There is no cordial milieu left and we wish the regime best. We don’t know about whether the reserved category employees, we’re calling off our protest”, he said while sobbing.

“No, we have only suspended our sit-in protest for somedays and we have now resorted to table talks with govt so that administration assures us security in the valley”, a female protestor said.

“We have tried to show the injustice happened with us to the administration because as citizens we can only stage protests to raise our matters, but the govt is not addressing our concerns”, she added.

“The govt has not paid our salaries from several months and they should contemplate how we’re managing our households and so many of us have ailing family members”, another woman protestor allegedly said.

“The govt has exploited us by putting our wages on hold. We have suspended our agitation to give to table talks so that our issues can be solved”, she asserted.

“Our core committee has reached this consensus to stop our protest for a while. Since the inception of our protest we have seen our employees”, a protestors said.

“Under the banner of All Migrant Displaced Employees Association Kashmir (AMDEAK) we ran this protest and we voiced our foremost demand that is security of employees, relocation and attachment in Jammu”, he added.

“Neither the local regime accepted our demands nor they rejected it instead they kept us all the time in-between”, he said.

“We are surrendering our lives in the hands of the govt because we have seen suffering employees and their families also and keeping all this in mind we’re calling off our protest and now it is in hands of govt to save our lives, this is our statement”, he further said.

 

J&K Govt Orders Transfer, Posting Of 9 Officers

Representational image
Representational image

Jammu and Kashmir Government on Saturday ordered transfer of nine officers in the civil administration.

According to a order issued to this effect by the General Administration Department, Atul Gupta, JKAS, Additional Deputy Commissioner, Kathua, is transferred and posted as Joint Director, Information, Jammu.

Mohammad Aslam, JKAS, Joint Director, Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs, Kashmir, is transferred and posted as Joint Director, Information, Kashmir, against an available vacancy.

Sapna Kotwal, JKAS, Joint Director, Information, Jammu, is transferred and posted as Secretary, J&K Advisory Board for Development of Pahari Speaking People.
Kusum Chib, JKAS, Collector, Jammu Development Authority, is transferred and posted as Assistant Commissioner Revenue, Samba.

Rehana Akhtar Bili, JKAS, Deputy Director, Information, Jammu, is transferred and posted as Personnel Officer, Associated Hospitals, Jammu, against an available vacancy.
Manu Hansa, JKAS, Assistant Commissioner Revenue, Samba, is transferred and posted as Sub Divisional Magistrate, Marh, vice Mr. Rajeev Kumar Khajuria, JKAS, who shall await further orders of adjustment in the General Administration Department. He shall also hold the additional charge of the post of Sub-Registrar, Marh, till further orders.

Parul Khajuria, Jr. Scale JKAS, Cultural Officer, Directorate of Information, Jammu, is transferred and posted as Under Secretary to the Government, Youth Services and Sports Department.

Beenish Wani, Jr. Scale JKAS, Information Officer in the Directorate of Information, J&K, is transferred and posting as Assistant Director, Employment, Ganderbal.

Manoj Pandita, Under Secretary to the Government, Information Department, is transferred and posted as Under Secretary to the Government, Cooperatives Department.

Snow clearance operation begins on historic Mughal road

The snow clearance process has been started on the historic Mughal highway connecting Kashmir Valley with Poonch and Rajouri districts of Pir Panchal region, officials said today.

Snow has been removed from the road up to Pushana check post, said an official.

AEE Mechanical wing, Riyaz Ahmad said the snow clearance hasn’t been started from Shopian yet. He said that the snow clearance with begin from Shopian from Monday.

He said that the staff and machinery from Poonch side have reached Pushana and are moving upwards.

However, the process of snow removal up to Peer ki Gali and the complete restoration of the road depends on the weather conditions.

The road was closed for traffic after heavy snowfall in the first week of January.

Mysterious ‘heartbeat’ solar flare coming from sun’s surface, says scientists

Scientists are stumped after detecting mysterious signals that sound just like “heartbeats” thousands of miles above the sun’s molten surface.

Researchers believe the beats – which repeat between every 10 to 20 seconds – could help us better understand the most powerful explosions in the solar system.

Experts led by the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) detected the signal at about 3,106 above the star’s surface.

They believed its produced by a C-class solar flare, which they went on to describe as the most powerful expulsion of energy.

For one to be large enough to create the beats, it would need to be far larger than Earth.

Lead researcher and Astronomer Sijie Yu called the discovery “unexpected”.

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He continued: “This beating pattern is important for understanding how energy is released and is dissipated in the sun’s atmosphere during these incredibly powerful explosions on the sun.

“However, the origin of these repetitive patterns, also called quasi-periodic pulsations, has long been a mystery and a source of debate among solar physicists.”

Using the Expanded Owens Valley Solar Array (EOVSA) – a US facility that tracks microwave radio frequencies – scientists were able to track down the exact location of the first pulse.

The initial signal is believed to be coming from the base of an electrical current over 25,000 kilometres through the eruption’s core.

This is where it is strongest due to the opposing magnetic field lines approaching one another, before breaking and then reconnecting.

While analysing this discovery, scientists accidentally stumbled upon a second mystery pulse.

Lead author, PhD student at Nanjing University (NJU) Yuankun Kou was the researcher who likened the sound to a heartbeat.

“The repeating patterns are not uncommon for solar radio bursts,” Kou added.

“But interestingly, there is a secondary source we did not expect located along the stretched current sheet that pulses in a similar fashion.”

It’s the first time something like this has been detected, added Kou.

And the investigation into both “heartbeat-like” pulses continues, reports the Daily Star.

It comes researchers discovered a supermassive black hole lurking at the edge of the universe, which is the biggest-ever detected.

It contained over a billion solar masses worth of interstellar dust – forming stars 1,000 times faster than our own Milky Way.

The cosmic colossus lies at the centre of an extreme galaxy and dates back more than 13 billion years – to only 750 million years after the Big Bang.

It could help answer one of the biggest mysteries in astronomy – how supermassive black holes in space evolved.

Lead author Dr Ryan Endsley, of The University of Texas at Austin, said: “These results suggest very early supermassive black holes were often heavily obscured by dust, perhaps as a consequence of the intense star formation activity in their host galaxies.

“This is something others have been predicting for a few years now, and it’s really nice to see the first direct observational evidence supporting this scenario.”