Friday, 8 October 2021

Russia extends friendly hand to ‘Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan’,

Times Now Digital Oct 07, 2021 

Invites Taliban to Moscow for talks on October 20

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s special representative to Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov, did not reveal details of the talks.

The Taliban delegation that engaged in Afghan peace talks in Qatar two months ago.The Taliban delegation that engaged in Afghan peace talks in Qatar two months ago.  |  Photo Credit: APKEY HIGHLIGHTSRussia is worried about the ripple effects of the Afghan fallout that could have a far wider impact in the regionMoscow is concerned about the possibility of Islamist militants infiltrating former Soviet strongholds, which Russia sees as its defensive buffer down south

Moscow: In what appears to be a concern not only for the United States of America, but also for countries in Asia, the Taliban has been extended a friendly hand by Russia amid a global outcry over the insurgent group’s return to power in Afghanistan.

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s special representative to Afghanistan informed on Thursday that the country will invite representatives of the Taliban for international-level talks in Moscow on October 20.

However, representative Zamir Kabulov did not reveal further details of the talks, according to news agency Reuters.

Moscow had in March hosted an international conference on Afghanistan, which was attended by Russia, the United States, China and Pakistan. They had then issued a joint statement calling for the warring Afghan sides – government and insurgents – to arrive at a peace deal and check violence.

It had also urged on the Taliban to not launch any offensives anytime soon.

However, with the United States and its allies later withdrawing their troops after 20 years of intervention in the Central Asian country, the Taliban seized the opportunity to take down the Ashraf Ghani government in a lightning advance, bring down Kabul in a blitzkrieg.

Russia, meanwhile, is concerned about the ripple effects of this fallout that could have a far wider impact in the region and the possibility of Islamist militants infiltrating former Soviet strongholds, which Moscow sees as its defensive buffer down south.

With the brisk Taliban takeover, Moscow rushed in with military exercises in Tajikistan and augmented its ammunition at the military base there.

Lakhimpur Kheri violence: Union minister's son Ashish Mishra expected to appear before cops today


Oct 09, 2021 Written by Joydeep Bose | Edited by Meenakshi Ray, Hindustan Times, New Delhi

Ashish Mishra was named in a first information report (FIR) following allegations that he was in one of the vehicles that mowed down farmers protesting against UP deputy chief minister Keshav Prasad Maurya's visit on Sunday.

In photos posted by the ANI news agency, it was seen that the UP police has already started making preparations to tighten the security in Lakhimpur Kheri police lines, ahead of Ashish Mishra's expected appearance before the cops today.

Ashish Mishra, the son of Union minister of state (MoS) of home affairs Ajay Mishra ‘Teni’, is expected to appear before the Uttar Pradesh police at 11am on Saturday for questioning in connection with the incident where eight people lost their lives. 

Ashish Mishra was previously summoned as a witness, not an accused, by the police on Friday but he failed to appear before them. MoS Teni later said his son was unable to report to the police due to ‘health reasons’. After this, the UP police pasted 

a fresh notice outside the minister's residence asking his son Ashish Mishra to appear before them for questioning on October 9.

இந்திய மீனவர்களின் அத்துமீறலை எதிர்த்து யாழில் போராட்டம்!!


 

பதிவு சாதனா Friday, October 08, 2021 

இந்திய மீனவர்களின் அத்துமீறலைக் கண்டித்து யாழ்ப்பாணத்திலுள்ள கடற்தொழில் நீரியல் வளத் திணைக்களத்திற்கு முன்பாக இன்று வெள்ளிக்கிழமை  காலை மீனவர்கள் ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் ஒன்றை நடத்தியுள்ளனர்.

கடந்த 5ம் திகதி இலங்கை கடற்பரப்புக்குள் அத்துமீறி நுழைந்த இந்திய இழுவை படகு, குருநகர் பகுதி மீனவர்களின் படகினை நேராக மோதி சேதப்படுத்தியதோடு படகில் இருந்த குருநகர் மீனவர்களை தாக்க இந்திய மீனவர்கள் முயன்ற நிலையில், இன்று அதற்கு எதிர்ப்பு தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டே மீனவர் சங்கங்களின் ஏற்பாட்டில் போராட்டம் இடம்பெற்றது.

எமது கடல் வளங்களை அழிக்காதே, இலங்கை அரசே இந்திய இழுவைப் படகுகளை தடுத்து நிறுத்து, எமது கடல் எல்லைக்குள் அத்துமீறி வெளிநாட்டு மீனவர்களை அனுமதிக்காதே, இலங்கை அரசே உரிய சட்டங்களை நடைமுறைப்படுத்து, கடல் வளத்தை சுரண்டி எமது வாழ்வாதாரத்தை அழிக்காதே போன்ற பல்வேறு கோசங்கள் எழுப்பப்பட்டன.

போராட்டத்திற்கு பின்னர் கடற்றொழில் நீரியல்வளத்துறை திணைக்களத்தின் யாழ் மாவட்ட பணிப்பாளரிடம்  போராட்டத்தில் ஈடுபட்டிருந்தவர்களால் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது.

அதேவேளை கடற்றொழில் அமைச்சருக்கும்,யாழ் மாவட்ட செயலகத்திற்கும், யாழில் உள்ள இந்திய துணைத்தூதரகத்திற்கும் இதன் மகஜர் கையளிக்கப்பட்டது.


U.S. Senate approves temporary lift of debt ceiling, averts default

 WASHINGTON, Oct 7 (Reuters) - By Richard Cowan and Makini Brice

The U.S. Senate approved legislation on Thursday to temporarily raise the federal government's $28.4trillion debt limit and avoid the risk of a historic default this month, but put off until early December a decision on a longer-lasting remedy.

The Senate voted 50-48 to pass the bill following weeks of partisan fighting. Earlier, 11 Republicans voted in favor of a procedural vote allowing the bill to proceed.

The Senate-passed bill now goes to the House of Representatives, which needs to approve it before President Joe Biden can sign it into law. The House will hold a vote on the bill on Tuesday, according to the office of the No. 2 House Democrat, Steny Hoyer.

"President Biden looks forward to signing this bill as soon as it passes the House and reaches his desk," White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in statement on Thursday.

"As we approach the coming months, we hope that even more Republicans will join Democrats in responsibly addressing the debt limit instead of choosing default or obstruction."

The $480 billion increase, which would lift the debt limit to $28.9 trillion, is expected to be exhausted by Dec. 3, the same day that funding for most federal programs expires under a stop-gap measure passed earlier this month following another partisan standoff.

That means that over the next eight weeks, the bitterly divided Congress will have the twin challenges of finding a middle ground on agency spending through September 2022 -- ranging from education and foreign aid programs to immigration enforcement and airport security -- and avoiding yet another debt limit meltdown.

The vote followed a months-long standoff that brought the nation close to the Oct. 18 date that the Treasury Department forecast as when it would no longer be able to meet its obligations.

"Republicans played a dangerous and risky partisan game and I am glad that their brinksmanship did not work," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said after the vote.

The plan emerged on Wednesday after top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell said Republicans were open to a temporary hike after twice blocking Democrats' attempts to raise the cap. That offer came after Biden raised the possibility of bypassing the Senate's filibuster rule requiring 60 of the 100 members to agree on most legislation.

Not all Republicans were happy with McConnell's move, and it took long negotiations behind closed doors to secure enough Republican votes to advance the measure.

"This is a complete capitulation," said Republican Lindsey Graham.

Earlier in the day, news of the negotiations drove Wall Street's main stock indexes to end sharply higher in a broad-based rally. In a sign of bond market relief, the yield on one-month Treasury bills fell to the lowest point since Sept. 8 as investors deemed that the risk of default had eased. read more

RECONCILIATION

Washington's debt limit troubles are unlikely to be resolved with passage of the short-term increase.

McConnell is still expected to insist that the next increase in December be achieved through the time-consuming "budget reconciliation" process, which would allow for passage without any votes from his party.

Doing so could bolster Republican candidates in the 2022 congressional elections as they try to burnish their credentials as fiscal conservatives - even though most of them previously supported an array of measures passed during Republican Donald Trump's administration that jacked up U.S. budget deficits.

Democrats have adamantly rejected using the reconciliation process, although they have used it to pass some of Biden's other priorities, saying that in this case it is too unwieldy and would establish a bad precedent.

Referring to the deal providing a debt limit reprieve until December, McConnell said in a Senate speech: "Now there will be no question. They'll (Democrats) have plenty of time" to pass the next increase using reconciliation.

Democrats had been trying to pass legislation that would have raised the debt limit through the end of 2022, which Republicans blocked.

While the deal relieves debt ceiling pressures for now, it adds to the high-stakes, partisan battles Congress will wage through the end of the year.

Democrats want to pass two massive spending bills that make up much of Biden's domestic agenda in the coming weeks, including a multi-trillion-dollar social policy package to be passed by reconciliation and a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill.

But by late November, their attention will have to return to funding the government and again avoiding the debt ceiling.

Reporting by Richard Cowan, Makini Brice, Susan Cornwell and David Morgan; Additional reporting by Aishwarya Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Scott Malone, Rosalba O'Brien, Leslie Adler and Michael Perry

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