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India Gazette
8 hours ago
- Health
- India Gazette
"PM Modi got Yoga Day recognised on world stage": Delhi CM Rekha Gupta ahead of International Yoga Day
New Delhi [India], June 20 (ANI): Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta on Friday said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi made Yoga Day recognised on the world stage in such a way that every country in the world is adopting Yoga with great affection today. Addressing an event at a Yoga, Meditation, and Medical Camp in Delhi's Shalimar Bagh ahead of International Yoga Day tomorrow, Chief Minister Rekha Gupta said, 'PM Modi got Yoga Dayrecognised on the world stage in such a way that every country in the world is adopting Yoga with great affection today... India will be able to prosper only if it remains healthy.' As India is gearing up to celebrate the 11th International Day of Yoga on June 21, the government is organising a multitude of events nationwide to mark the occasion with 'Yoga for One Earth, One Health' as this year's theme. Yoga Sangam, the main event, will orchestrate a synchronised mass yoga demonstration based on the Common Yoga Protocol (CYP) at over 1 lakh locations across India on June 21, 2025, from 6:30 AM to 7:45 AM. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will lead the national event at Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh. This collective celebration aims to reaffirm our shared commitment to the timeless practice of yoga and its enduring relevance in today's world. This year marks the 11th International Day of Yoga, with the theme 'Yoga for One Earth, One Health'. This theme echoes a vital truth about the interconnectedness of health, sustainability, and the environment, aligning with India's 'One Earth, One Family, One Future' vision highlighted during its G20 presidency. The International Day of Yoga 2025 will not just be a one-day observance--it will reflect India's enduring commitment to holistic health, environmental harmony, and global well-being. With 'Yoga for One Earth, One Health' as its guiding principle, India continues to lead the world in connecting physical fitness with mindful living. (ANI)


Time of India
14 hours ago
- Health
- Time of India
Stage set for Yoga Day at 4K places across UP: Minister
1 2 Varanasi: The theme of 11th International Yoga Day , to be celebrated on Sunday, Jun 21, is 'Yoga for One Earth, One Health', with the aim of integrating yoga into lifestyle of public and to spread its message globally. UP minister of AYUSH, Dayashankar Mishra 'Dayalu', said yoga was not just a physical exercise but means for a harmonious lifestyle, mental balance and alignment with nature. He said extensive arrangements had been made made for the state-level event at 4,075 designated sites and the main event would be held on Raj Bhavan lawns in Lucknow. The minister said that to realise vision of Prime Minister's 'Yoga for Cooperation' and Chief Minister Yogi's 'Healthy Uttar Pradesh', Yoga Week was being observed across the state from Jun 15 to 21, featuring special programmes, from village councils to Raj Bhavan. He said the plan was prepared with cooperation of the Lucknow Development Authority, transport corporation, police administration, municipal corporation, medical department, and information and public relations department for LED, sound systems, yoga mats, refreshments, security, traffic management and cleanliness. In addition to the main event at the Raj Bhavan, group yoga sessions will be organised at 10 major parks in Lucknow, besides at 4,075 designated sites across the state, and at 1 lakh locations nationwide. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Memperdagangkan CFD Emas dengan salah satu spread terendah? IC Markets Mendaftar Undo Mishra said Yoga Week activities began as rehearsals on Jun 15, involving various competitions such as speeches, rangoli, extempore speeches, posters, and yoga exercises in AYUSH colleges, schools, universities, and hospitals. He said special yoga sessions were being organised for specific groups like pregnant women, differently-abled individuals, underprivileged groups, prisoners, orphaned children and slum dwellers. Additionally, the 'Y-Break' five-minute yoga method was being promoted in offices and the corporate sector. The minister said that under the 'Yoga Unplugged' branding, social media-based national and international yoga competitions were being held to attract youth. The aim of the initiative was to raise awareness about yoga among youth and make it an integral part of their daily routine. This time, yoga is being linked with environmental conservation through yoga sessions at natural sites, tree planting and cleanliness drives. Special yoga sessions are being organised at Amrit Sarovars, rivers, lakes, and parks, with tree planting under 'One Tree in Mother's Name' initiative.


India Gazette
16 hours ago
- Health
- India Gazette
Delhi Metro services to commence from 4 am on International Yoga Day
New Delhi [India], June 19 (ANI): In order to facilitate the movement of Yoga Enthusiasts on the occasion of international Yoga Day, the Delhi Metro services will commence from 4 AM from all originating stations on June 21, an official statement said. In a post on X, Delhi Metro Rail Corporation said, 'Delhi Metro services will commence from 4 am from all originating stations on 21st June 2025 (Saturday) to facilitate the movement of yoga enthusiasts on the occasion of International Day of Yoga, 2025.' 'Services will be available on all lines at an interval of 30 minutes from 4 am onwards till the commencement of passenger services as per daily timetable', it added. As India is gearing up to celebrate the 11th International Day of Yoga on June 21, the government is organising a multitude of events nationwide to mark the occasion with 'Yoga for One Earth, One Health' as this year's themeYoga Sangam, the main event, will orchestrate a synchronised mass yoga demonstration based on the Common Yoga Protocol (CYP) at over 1 lakh locations across India on June 21, 2025, from 6:30 AM to 7:45 AM. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will lead the national event at Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh. This collective celebration aims to reaffirm our shared commitment to the timeless practice of yoga and its enduring relevance in today's world. An invaluable gift of ancient Indian tradition, Yoga has emerged as one of the most trusted means to boost physical and mental well-being. The word 'Yoga' is derived from the Sanskrit root 'yuj', meaning 'to join,' 'to yoke,' or 'to unite.' It symbolises the unity of mind and body, thought and action, restraint and fulfilment, harmony between human and nature, and a holistic approach to health and well-being. (ANI)


Tom's Guide
21 hours ago
- Business
- Tom's Guide
I track mattress sales for a living and this is the best deal I've ever seen on the Casper Cloud One
Casper's Cloud One mattress has an innovative approach to side sleeper comfort, and for the first time ever you can save on this plush all-foam bed with 20% off the new Cloud One mattress in the Casper 4th of July sale. We've spent thousands of hours testing beds to find the best mattresses for all sleep styles but the Cloud One is like nothing we've tried, using unique foam pillars to create targeted cushioning and to enhance airflow, resulting in cooler sleep on an all-foam bed. Casper mattress sales are semi-regular and even then, the brand states that the Cloud One is excluded from site-wide discounts. We've been patiently waiting for a sale on the Cloud One and it's finally here, so now is the time to browse. Want a more traditional mattress feel? You can find all the latest deals on all bed types with our mattress sales guide. Casper Cloud One mattress: full was $1,149 now $919.20 at CasperCasper's Cloud One mattress is an all-foam design but it differs significantly from the beds you'll find in our guide to the best memory foam mattresses. Designed using foam pillars, instead of the traditional foam slab, this pocketed approach should improve air flow and add plushness, with each pillar contouring to your body for targeted comfort. It promises a medium feel and we expect it to have a cushioned pressure relief similar to the best mattresses for side sleepers. There are only two sizes of the Casper Cloud One mattress available – full and queen – and this is the first time we've seen them discounted (the Cloud One was full price in the Memorial Day sales). With 20% off a queen is now $999.20 (was $1,249). A 100-night trial and 10-year warranty are included. User score: ★★★★½ (15 reviews) Casper The One mattress: twin was $749 now $599 at CasperCasper's flagship all-foam the One mattress might not have the unusual features of the Cloud One, but its supportive feel impressed in our Casper One mattress review. Firmer than the Cloud One, we think it's a good mattress for back sleepers, while its five-star motion isolation makes it a strong choice for couples. In the 20% off sale a queen is reduced from $999 to $799 and comes with a 100-night trial and 10-year warranty. We have seen slightly bigger discounts on the One, so if you aren't in a rush you might want to wait to buy. But be warned, Casper tends to save its biggest price drops for major sales days, so you might be waiting a while. Our review: ★★★★User score: ★★★★½ (17,000+ reviews)


Miami Herald
a day ago
- Business
- Miami Herald
Trump move to tax money sent abroad could devastate Latin America, Caribbean economies
A proposed tax on the money sent by immigrants in the United States to friends and families back in their home countries could have unintended devastating consequences for US. national security and for receiving countries, especially those in Latin America and the Caribbean that have come to heavily rely on the funds, experts warn. The 3.5% tax on remittances, which are not currently taxed, is among several provisions tucked inside President Donald Trump's 'One, Big, Beautiful Bill' tax and spending plan that House Republicans narrowly passed last month. Senate Republicans are now trying to agree on a version before sending it to the floor for a vote ahead of July 4, the deadline Trump has set for it to hit his desk. While there are some notable differences between what the House passed and what the Senate Finance Committee published on Monday, the proposed tax on remittances still risks pushing migrants to use unregulated and unlicensed networks to send money to their home countries and plunging countries like Haiti, where the money represents a key source of family income, deeper into economic hardship. It also requires U.S. citizens, green-card holders and anyone with a Social Security number to provide that information before they can send money abroad. 'We did a conservative estimate of the impact of these flows and it will have an effect of reducing transfers by at least 5% in the next year,' said Manuel Orozco, director of Migration, Remittances and Development Program at the Inter-American Dialogue in Washington. Orozco said that will have a devastating effect for countries in Central America along with the four nations — Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela — that were recently part of a Biden-era humanitarian parole program now being targeted by the Trump administration. Earlier this month the Supreme Court ruled that the Department of Homeland Security can deport beneficiaries of the program that had allowed them to temporarily stay and work in the U.S. for up to two years, while Trump's decision to end the program is being litigated in the courts. Last week, the administration began sending revocation letters to about 500,000 recipients of the program, urging them to leave the U.S. on their own. Many of those targeted are also enrolled in Temporary Protected Status, another benefit that the administration is seeking to end after rolling back their end dates. 'On the one hand, the Temporary Protected Status and the humanitarian parole is being discontinued for people from these four nationalities,' Orozco said. 'On the other hand, you have the tax increase for those nationalities who happen to be much less likely to have a social security number because they arrived recently, they escaped their home country for political reasons or due to state fragility or state failure as in the case of Haiti.' In the case of Haiti, which has become highly dependent on remittances, 'you're dealing with a time bomb,' said Orozco, who found that for every $10 dollars remitted to Haiti in 2020 — when the country received $3.8 billion from abroad — at least $8 came from the U.S. 'The impact of this tax on Haiti will be devastating because there are 500,000 Haitians' at risk of losing their legal right to stay in the U.S. in August., Orozco said. 'Haiti's dependence on remittances is significant in a moment where … the state has already collapsed, and income basically depends on remittance flows. So the implications of these are far more complex.' But Haiti's remittance flows, which surpassed $4 billion last year according to its central bank, are not the only ones that risk taking a hit should the tax provision pass. Central American nations with economies weakened by years of instability and insecurity also will be hurt. Orozco cites the case of Guatemala, where he recently examined 15 years' worth of data through 2024. A 1% increase in remittances, Orozco said, led to a 15% increase in the country's GDP. 'Remittances have increased an average of 13% for the past 15 years,' he said. 'If remittances were to fall 10%, you will have an economic recession in Guatemala, because a 1% decrease will decelerate the Guatemalan economy substantially for more than four months.' The decline, he said, would be much more severe in Honduras, where a 1% increase in remittances increased the GDP by 33%. In both Central American nations, remittance income accounts for 30% of private consumption and any decline will have a direct effect on gross domestic product, GDP, Orozco said. 'You will have a big blow in these countries' economies,' he said. On Wednesday, Orozco was part of a conversation about the effects of the legislation on family remittances. Fellow panelists Kathy Tomasofsky, the executive director of Money Services Business Association, and Marina Olman-Pal, chair of the Legal & Regulatory Affairs Committee of the Financial & International Business Association, said many questions that remain about the legislation. The Senate version appears to focus on cross-border transfers that are initiated in cash and being sent to family members, Olman-Pal said. Transfers funded with debit or credit cards appear to be excluded in the Senate version. The original tax got scaled back from 5% to 3.5%. While the House version required senders to be U.S. citizens, the Senate version expands the universe to include those with social security numbers that allow them to work. It also offers more exemptions ,such as individuals using debit and credit cards to transfer money abroad. In the version released by the Senate Finance Committee on Monday, the tax must be collected by the remittance company and paid quarterly to the Treasury Department. 'For an American citizen, a green card holder that has that Social Security information, you are going to now have to complete a form and hand over that information to your cashier in order to affect the transfer,' said Tomasofsky. 'The business company, that small business, is going to have to set up a procedure to collect the information, to store that information. There are concerns about privacy.' Tomasofsky said the industry has made significant strides in the last 20 years, but the new reporting system could have an adverse effect on small grocery stores and businesses. For example, a company that only does 500 transactions a month may opt to get out of the business after deciding it's not worth the extra compliance. 'I'm not certain that it's going to provide any benefit to anyone in the long run because of it,' she said. Olman-Pal said while social security numbers are protected under federal and state law, there is a risk associated with increased collection. She agrees with Tomasofsky that the cost of banking could also go up as a result of the legislation's new requirements. 29 bills on taxing remittances The motivation for such legislation varies depending on the proponent. Some say it's intended to discourage unauthorized migration. Some others say it's a means to raise revenue, while some proponents accuse migrants of not paying taxes and say it's a way to tax them indirectly. Orozco and the others caution against all of these assumptions, noting that studies show that migrants, regardless of immigration status, do file taxes and in some cases the money they send home has discouraged migration to the U.S. Still, this past year, 18 states have proposed 29 different bills on taxing remittances, Tomasofsky said. In all but one instance, Tomasofsky said, the industry was able to push back 'by demonstrating how many unintended consequences there are in this bill, and the states have not moved those bills forward.' But this is the first time that the push to tax remittances, which already come with high fees, has reached a level where there appears to be political appetite for approving it. 'The motivations may be political, but everything is about the fine print, the content of what you try to come up with, and the adverse effect that it can have, the backfiring effect,' Orozco said. To underscore his point, he brought up the case of Ghanaians living in Europe and an analysis of the global money transfer market and the relationship between stiff regulations and higher transaction costs. As a result of the stiffer controls on the origination and destination of remittances, nationals of Ghana in Europe, for example, turned to informal channels, Orozco said. 'Statistically, for a 1% increase in the transaction cost the use of informal fund transfers will increase by 6% but also, there is a cost element to it,' he said. 'Immigrants don't have an infinite amount of resources. They have a very limited income capacity that in the U.S. averages to about $3,300 a month.' 'If your transaction cost goes from 3 to 6% or 6.5%, you're actually spending 1% of your monthly income just to pay those costs. And what typically people do is send less money,' Orozco added. 'So you will see one side going informal, and another side who may pay the tax but send less money.'