Train runs over passengers at railway station in Jharkhand, some dead: Official

In a major accident, a train ran over some passengers at Kala Jharia railway station in Jamtara of Jharkhand, Jamtara Deputy Commissioner Shashi Bhushan Mehra said

Updated On – 28 February 2024, 09:09 PM


Train runs over passengers at railway station in Jharkhand, some dead: Official

Representational Image

Jamtara: In a major accident, a train ran over some passengers at Kala Jharia railway station in Jamtara of Jharkhand, Jamtara Deputy Commissioner Shashi Bhushan Mehra said.

The Deputy Commissioner informed further that a few deaths have been reported in the incident.


However, he added that it was still too early to determine the exact number of deaths.

Medical teams and ambulances have been rushed to the spot, he added.

Further details are awaited.

PM's Southern Push Sees Big-Ticket Projects, Attacks On Opposition

PM's Southern Push Sees Big-Ticket Projects, Attacks On Opposition

The Prime Minister has made multiple visits to the states in the past few months.

Thoothukudi (Tamil Nadu):

Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced development projects worth over Rs 17,000 crore for different sectors here on Wednesday, as he wrapped up his two-day visit to the key southern states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu during which he also made a strong pitch for the BJP ahead of the Lok Sabha polls.

Tamil Nadu is writing a ‘new chapter of progress,’ and due to the Centre’s efforts, modern connectivity in the state is ‘on a new high’, PM Modi said after inaugurating the projects.

Apart from giving a strong infra push, PM Modi also launched a political attack against the opposition parties, and asserted that the earlier UPA regime was not ‘bothered’ about Tamil Nadu’s progress.

In back-to-back events in the two southern states that have always cold-shouldered the BJP and have 59 Lok Sabha seats on offer, PM Modi asserted his party was second to none when delivering to the people of the southern states.

PM Modi’s visit, just few months before the Lok Sabha polls, comes amid efforts by the BJP to make inroads in the south where the saffron party’s presence, barring Karnataka, has been negligible.

The Prime Minister has made multiple visits to these states in the past few months, combining official work with temple visits and roadshows.

On Wednesday, the PM laid the foundation stone of multiple development projects, including a new launch complex of ISRO. The facility, at Kulasekarapattinam near here, is worth about Rs 986 crore and the facility is set to accommodate 24 launches per year.

He also laid the foundation stone for the outer harbour container terminal for VO Chidambaranar Port and flagged off India’s first indigenous green hydrogen waterway vessel. He launched projects in the rail sector as well.

Further, he launched blistering attacks on the Congress and DMK, particularly training his guns against the latter which is ruling Tamil Nadu. PM Modi charged the two with creating divisions in the society and coming up with ‘innovative ideas’ for this purpose.

Criticising the DMK for staging a walkout in the Parliament during a recent discussion on the Ayodhya Shri Ram temple, he alleged the DMK has again proved its hate for people’s faith.

“Tamil Nadu’s connect with Shri Ram is well-known. Before the January 22 consecration of the Ram temple in Ayodhya, I visited different temples, including in Dhanushkodi (in Tamil Nadu). The entire country was happy that the temple was coming up after so many years. A related matter came up in the Parliament but the DMK MPs ran away,” PM Modi said at a rally in neighbouring Tirunelveli.

He also criticised the DMK for being ‘oblivious’ to the nation’s achievements in the space sector, after a newspaper advertisement by a state minister belonging to the party over a spaceport kicked up a row over what the BJP claimed was a ‘Chinese flag’.

BJP’s accusation was only political in nature, DMK spokesperson J Constandine Ravindran said.

On Tuesday, PM Modi attended multiple events in Kerala and Tamil Nadu, addressing public rallies as well as engaging in official programmes.

Among them was the important announcement revealing the names of the four IAF pilots– the astronaut-designates of the country’s maiden human spaceflight programme, Gaganyaan.

He bestowed them with the prestigious ‘astronaut wings,’ at an event at the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC), located at Thumba near Kerala capital Thiruvananthapuram.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

All special passes cancelled in Vemulawada: Ponnam

In place of special passes, a Rs.300 ticket was introduced to have special darshan of the presiding deity

Published Date – 28 February 2024, 08:36 PM


All special passes cancelled in Vemulawada: Ponnam

File Photo

Rajanna-Sircilla: Transport and BC Welfare Minister Ponnam Prabhakar said on Wednesday that all special passes issued earlier were cancelled on the occasion of Maha Sivaratri jatara scheduled to be held at the Sri Rajarajeshwara Swamy temple, Vemulawada from March 7 to 9.

In place of special passes, a Rs.300 ticket was introduced to have special darshan of the presiding deity. After the jatara, steps would be taken to develop Vemulawada on par with Srisailam temple.


The Minister instructed officials to make arrangements for darshan and develop a separate temple to perform Abhishekam and Kunkuma pujas. Each and every service and pujas being done in the shrine should be online for the convenience of devotees, he said.

Participating in a coordination meeting at the temple on Wednesday, the Minister reviewed the arrangements being made for the jatara.

Israel’s Olmert warns against invasion of Rafah


Ehud Olmert, the former head of the Israeli regime

Ehud Olmert, the former head of the Israeli regime, has warned against a planned invasion of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, citing potential international fury.

“The patience of the international community has reached a point from where I don’t think they’ll be able to absorb it,” Olmert was quoted by Bloomberg as saying in an interview.

Olmert headed the regime between 2006 and 2009.

He also expressed concern that a ground attack on Rafah “may shatter the peace agreement between Israel and Egypt.”

Olmert said prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu should stop the war and focus on a plan that will enable the military to leave Gaza and international forces to go in as peacekeepers.

International alarm over such an invasion has intensified in recent days. Netanyahu has threatened that the regime will “do it anyway.”

Rafah, the town along the Egyptian border, which was once deemed a “safe zone” by the Israeli military, has now become the last refuge for over half of Gaza’s entire population of more than 2.3 million, who have fled their homes in other parts of the territory.

Egypt has already threatened to suspend its peace treaty with Israel if the regime sends its troops to Rafah. It said any ground invasion could force the closure of the besieged territory’s main aid supply route.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also warned on Monday that such an invasion would “put the final nail in the coffin” of aid operations in Gaza.


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"Can't Pay Attention To A Country Soaked In Red": India On Pakistan At UN

'Can't Pay Attention To A Country Soaked In Red': India On Pakistan At UN

India’s response came at the 55th Regular Session of the UN Human Rights Council

Geneva:

In a befitting reply to Pakistan, India exercised its ‘Right of Reply’ in response to references to New Delhi stating that the nation that has institutionalized the systemic persecution of its minorities and has a truly abysmal human rights record has no right to comment on India.

Exercising the ‘Right of Reply’ at the High-Level Segment of the 55th Regular Session of the UN Human Rights Council on Wednesday, First Secretary Anupama Singh said that regarding Pakistan’s lengthy mentions of India, it is very regrettable that the Council’s forum has once again been abused to propagate flagrantly false accusations about India.

“With regard to the extensive references to India made by Pakistan, we note that it is deeply unfortunate for the Council’s platform to have once again been misused to make patently false allegations against India,” she said.

“The entire Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh is an integral and inalienable part of India, and the constitutional measures taken by the Government of India to ensure socio-economic development and good governance in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir are matters internal to India. Pakistan has no locus standi to pronounce on matters that are internal to India,” she added.

Terming Pakistan’s human rights record as “truly abysmal,” the First Secretary said, “A country that has institutionalized the systemic persecution of its own minorities and has a truly abysmal human rights record, commenting on India, which is demonstrably making great strides in achieving economic progress and social justice, is not merely ironical but perverse.”

“A glaring example was the large scale brutality perpetrated against the minority Christian community in Jaranwala city, Pakistan in August 2023, when 19 churches were gutted and 89 Christian houses burnt down. Three, a country that hosts and even celebrates UNSC-sanctioned terrorists, commenting on India whose pluralistic ethos and democratic credentials are exemplars for the world, is a contrast for everyone to see,” she said further.

Ms Singh also said that the government has failed to serve the actual interests of its citizens, and added that Pakistan sponsors terrorism around the world.

“We cannot pay any further attention to a country that speaks while being soaked in red the red of the bloodshed from the terrorism it sponsors around the world; the red of its debt-riddled national balance sheets; and the red of the shame its own people feel for their government having failed to serve their actual interests,” she concluded.

The 55th Regular Session of the UN Human Rights Council is taking place from February 26-April 5.

India had in August last year said that an environment free of terror and hostilities was imperative for normal ties with Pakistan.

Answering queries after the then Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had expressed his willingness to hold talks with India, the Ministry of External Affairs had said that India wants normal ties with all its neighbouring countries including Pakistan.

“We desire normal neighbourly relations with all our neighbours, including Pakistan. For this an environment free of terror and hostility is imperative,” a MEA spokesperson had said.

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar had said in an earlier interview with the news agency ANI that Pakistan’s future will be largely determined by its own actions and choices and it is for the neighbouring country to find a way out of its economic troubles.

Pakistan is currently grappling with economic difficulties including dwindling forex reserves, high inflation and sharp depreciation of its currency.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Online loan app claims another life in Rajanna-Sircilla

According to family members, the victim could have ended his life unable to tolerate harassment by online loan app executives, the police registering a case and are investigating

Published Date – 28 February 2024, 10:01 PM


Online loan app claims another life in Rajanna-Sircilla

According to family members, the victim could have ended his life unable to tolerate harassment by online loan app executives, the police registering a case and are investigating

Rajanna-Sircilla: Unable to tolerate harassment by online loan app executives, a youngster died, allegedly by suicide. The body of Chippa Sai Raju (28) was found in the Mid Manair reservoir on Wednesday.

According to the police, a native of Nehurunagar of Sircilla town, Sai Raju had gone missing three days ago. His mobile location was tracked on Wednesday morning, following which the police found the body in the reservoir.


According to family members, Sai Raju could have ended his life unable to tolerate harassment by online loan app executives who allegedly harassed him by sending objectionable photos of his wife to relatives and friends. The police, who are investigating after registering a case, were yet to confirm this.

Opinion: Automation and future of work

Policies must be designed to facilitate women and socially disadvantaged groups to leverage new tech for an equitable future of work

Published Date – 28 February 2024, 11:59 PM


Opinion: Automation and future of work


By Dr Anita Hammer

A dystopia of job loss and surveillance or a utopia of transformation and progress. This conundrum sums up the intense debate around automation and its impact on the future of work.


Optimistic narratives about progress from the Fourth Industrial Revolution or a Second Machine Age are juxtaposed by predictions of a bleak future, where robots and automated processes lead to mass casualisation, surveillance and control.

The reality is not so simple.

Automation involves a new relationship between workers and technology, new ‘spatial fixes’, whether in global production networks or remote working, as well as enabling new types of employment relations.

It is important to place global narratives on the future of work in labour-abundant economies such as India, where the effects of automation could pose a challenge for development. India has long struggled with structural inequalities, poverty, a predominance of informal work and self-employment, and rising unemployment. It also has niche expertise in information technology.

Young graduates and mid-level professionals appear likely to benefit from the AI revolution. Tensions over inequality – aggravated by fears that technological innovations will undermine job opportunities and security – dominate.

An assessment of how automation is impacting work in India does not support a dramatic shift from existing employment practices or major changes. Rather, the adoption of emerging technologies is uneven and patchy. It may improve employment conditions for some workers but is not likely to benefit the majority without redistribution of income and wealth.

Manufacturing

Manufacturing could be heavily impacted by automation, but its adoption needs to be balanced by the cost of upgrades and the cost of labour where labour is plentiful. High-technology export-oriented automobile and telecommunication production are more likely to adopt advanced automation, partly because of the high number of routine tasks.

Labour-intensive industries such as textile, apparel, leather and footwear are less likely to adopt high technologies because of the need for high capital investments in what are predominantly small-scale firms in the informal sector, with easily available low-cost labour. Automation in the manufacturing sector is driven by ‘contractualisation’ – where contract workers are hired in place of direct hire employees to weaken the bargaining power of regular (full-time), unionised workers and keep wage demands in check – and labour replacement by firms. The share of contract workers in total employment has risen while that of directly employed workers fell.

It is also common for apprentices and contract workers to work alongside full-time workers to do the same job on the same shop floor, and for supply chains to source extensively from the informal economy.

While new jobs may be created, increased ‘contractualisation’ is leading to worsening employment conditions. Contract workers can be easily dismissed, receive a much lower wage than permanent workers and have no access to social protection mechanisms. The other employment trend likely to intensify is a shift from wage employment to self-employment. While new opportunities for entrepreneurship may be created, evidence shows that for most, self-employment is not a choice but a necessity.

Over 80 per cent of the workforce in the informal sector is classified as self-employed but operates at subsistence level with little access to capital or social security. Countering the myth that this shift to self-employment represents “entrepreneurialism”, the reality is of the “hidden dependency” of self-employment, and its gendered and caste- and community-based basis.

Workers are dependent on large firms or merchants, which leads to work intensification and reliance on unpaid family labour. These self-employed are largely precarious, informal workers prone to exploitation. A shift to ‘contractualisation’ and self-employment with increased automation may signify increasing informality and precarity, and worse employment conditions for many.

Services

The impact of emerging technologies is most visible in the business process outsourcing (BPO) and IT industries, the financial sector and in customer services. Back-end tasks are increasingly automated. However, this shift is unlikely to create widespread employment opportunities, as suggested by a significant slowdown in hiring and an increase in redundancies in the IT sector since 2016-2017. One report indicates that 6,40,000 low-skilled service jobs in the IT sector are at risk to automation, while only 1,60,000 mid- to high-skilled positions will be created in the IT and BPO service sectors.

IT sector workers will need to rapidly upskill, but fewer jobs will be created in the medium-long run. Informalisation and ‘contractualisation’ through outsourcing and subcontracting are increasing, at the cost of formal employment relationships in the IT sector. The platform economy promises new economic opportunities for service workers, especially women and migrant workers, by enabling new forms of micro entrepreneurship and freelance work.

It can improve employment conditions in terms of higher income, better working conditions, flexible work hours or access to banking. Platforms also promise a sense of community that can be mobilised for collective bargaining. However, leveraging these opportunities requires workers to have technical skills, when a majority have limited opportunities to upskill. This also highlights the disconnect between current education programmes and the skills employers need.

Often, surveillance and control belie the rhetoric of freedom, flexibility and autonomy. Labour share platforms are unregulated, profit-seeking, data-generating infrastructures that rely on opaque labour supply chains and the use of AI to control workers by directing, recommending and evaluating them and recording, rating and disciplining them through reward and replacement.

Like manufacturing, participation in gig-work is driven by the unavailability of alternative secure employment. Most people work multiple jobs for multiple employers on a piece-rate basis and lack access to formal social protection. Automation appears to be creating a flexible and controlled “digital labour” base, reproducing informality and precarious working conditions rather than positively transforming work.

Agriculture

Agriculture remains the largest source of employment in India with a high automation potential. Most agricultural tasks can be classified as manual, such as planting crops, applying pesticides and fertilisers, and harvesting. AI technology and data analytics have the potential to improve farm productivity, highlighted by the many agri-tech start-ups in India.

However, the underlying dynamics of agriculture and their pervasive and persistent role in perpetuating informal employment pose a challenge. Agriculture has structural inequalities, widespread poverty, subsistence farming, low-skill levels and low productivity. Land ownership is concentrated amongst a few, with limited capital investment, while 75 per cent of rural workers work in the informal sector, and 85 per cent have no employment contract, health and social security, some being subject to “neo-bondage”.

This extreme inequality combined with the decreasing size of landholdings, low growth and low capital investment means any widespread adoption of advanced farm automation and digital technologies appear unrealistic. More likely is the adoption of micro technologies and incremental mechanisation.

Growing labour surplus in agriculture continues to fuel the informal economy, where workers cannot break the vicious cycle of low wages and low skills. The absence of employment creation and increasing informalisation of formal manufacturing and service-sector jobs (in the platform economy and gig-work) are likely to aggravate these challenges.

Automation and Inequality

Automation is likely to bypass those sectors which employ most low-skilled workers. The societal implications of this are far-reaching. The low cost of labour in the informal economy reduces the likelihood of technological adoption. High poverty levels combined with low levels of education among semi-urban and rural men and women and marginalised social groups will limit their access to any gains from technological development. This will restrict economic opportunities.

Women and marginalised groups are less likely to have the digital skills and are more likely to occupy the jobs most vulnerable to the effects of automation. Self-employment is likely to increase, but not necessarily accompanied by an improvement in employment conditions. New technologies could further reinforce the vast urban-rural divide.

Automation could reproduce informal and precarious work rather than transform existing trends. A fair and equal future of work is possible through the adoption of new technologies – from the growth of the platform economy to remote learning opportunities. Their effectiveness will depend on how well they are integrated with broader policy interventions which address the deep-rooted inequalities and enduring employment and skilling challenges in India’s world of work. For example, skills have been identified as key in the national strategy of automation. Yet, India does not have a history of success in up/skilling with low investment in training structures and firms’ reluctance to invest in training and reliance on informal skilling. There is a significant digital gender divide that adversely impacts skilling initiatives.

Policies that facilitate the capacity of women as well as other socially disadvantaged groups to leverage new technologies will help towards an equitable future of work.

Hammer

Dr Anita Hammer teaches at King’s College London and researches work and employment in the Global South, with a particular focus on India and the Middle East. 360info

Increasing cybercrimes: Khammam CP Sunil Dutt asks public to be alert

If anyone was trapped by criminals he or she could get money back if they called the cybercrime toll-free number 1930 and lodge a complaint, Sunil Dutt said

Published Date – 28 February 2024, 10:09 PM


Increasing cybercrimes: Khammam CP Sunil Dutt asks public to be alert

CP Sunil Dutt inspected CCS in Khammam on Wednesday.

Khammam: In view of increasing online frauds in Khammam district, the public should be alert, suggested Commissioner of Police Sunil Dutt.

Police received 292 complaints related to online fraud in this year so far and complainants lost Rs 1.40 crore. An amount of Rs 25 lakh was frozen to prevent it being credited in the accounts of cybercriminals. Rs 6 lakh was credited back into the accounts of victims of online fraud, he informed.


Using modern technology cybercriminals were stealing money and sensitive information in mobile phones compromising privacy and security of individuals. If anyone was trapped by criminals he or she could get money back if they called the cybercrime toll-free number 1930 and lodge a complaint, Dutt said.

This call centre works round the clock under the aegis of Telangana State Cyber Security Bureau (TSCSB). Police were using the latest technology software to manage the calls made to the centre. Risk management teams of respective banks would be connected to this call centre and would find out where the money has gone by tracking the bank accounts and would freeze those accounts.

If the criminals do not withdraw money from those accounts, the cash in them would also be frozen. Cybercrime police were creating awareness among the youth through several programmes to save them from online frauds, he explained.

The district police were conducting extensive inspections to stop the smuggling of marijuana, PDS rice and sand across the state borders as well as to restrict the movement of old criminals to prevent thefts. 4822 e-petty cases have been registered in two months of the year and court imposed fines in 1014 cases and charge sheet was filed in 3, 354 cases, the CP said.

He inspected the Central Crime Station in the city on Wednesday and said necessary steps were being taken to strengthen the CCS for effective investigation of crimes. He told the CCS police to focus on the recovery of stolen property.