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Cops' performance to be assessed on feedback from complainants
Cops' performance to be assessed on feedback from complainants

Time of India

time09-06-2025

  • Time of India

Cops' performance to be assessed on feedback from complainants

1 2 Varanasi: Negative feedback from the public, especially complainants, will now have serious consequences for police station in-charges. Taking a serious note of such negative feedback, the station officer of Rohania, Vivek Kumar, was sent to the lines by Commissioner of Police, Mohit Agrawal, on Sunday night after a complainant was turned away five times from the police station. A team has been formed to assess the officials' performance at Rohania police station for improvements after it ranked lowest on the CP's parameters set for performance assessment on the CM dashboard. The team members visited the Rohania police station five times in the guise of complainants in May, and each time they were turned away without having their complaints registered. Following consistent negative feedback Kumar was sent to the lines. The CP has appointed Inspector Raju Singh as the SO of Rohania, while Inspector Durga Singh replaced the former at Ramnagar police station. Inspector Anil Kumar Sharma was appointed at Jansa police station. Before initiating this action, the CP held a review meeting and requested the implementation of suggestions received from traffic volunteers to maintain smooth traffic operations and said that responsible officers should continue appointing traffic volunteers at the designated intersections and routes and hold regular meetings with them. During inspections, the commissioner will seek feedback from traffic volunteers on maintaining smooth traffic flow and removing encroachments. Disciplinary action will be taken against responsible officers who fail to ensure efficient traffic management. The CP emphasised that the qualitative and effective resolution of public complaints is a top priority, and police officers' performance will be evaluated on its basis. Prompt and sensitive action should be taken for every incident. A zero-tolerance policy should be followed for crimes against women, he said, mentioning that a list of eve-teasers should be maintained at the station level, and their activities should be continuously monitored. The activities of the top-10 and active criminals should also be continuously monitored. The CP also held a police personnel conference and instructed ACP Lines to ensure proper arrangements of coolers, fans, water coolers, inverters, and cots at the stations. Departmental action will be taken against clerks who show negligence in resolving police officers' issues, he said, asking all station officers to hold such conferences at the station level each month to resolve police officers' problems.

When Gandhi meets Ambedkar: How higher education institutions can change our villages
When Gandhi meets Ambedkar: How higher education institutions can change our villages

Indian Express

time02-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

When Gandhi meets Ambedkar: How higher education institutions can change our villages

Also written by Virendra Kumar Vijay and Vivek Kumar 'True India lies in its seven lakh villages,' Mahatma Gandhi once declared, envisioning Gram Swaraj — self-reliant, self-governed village republics — as the foundation of Indian democracy. In sharp contrast, B R Ambedkar, speaking in the Constituent Assembly, fiercely rejected such idealisation: 'What is the village,' he remarked, 'but a sink of localism, a den of ignorance, narrow-mindedness and communalism?' For Gandhi, the village was the crucible of true independence; for Ambedkar, it was a site of deeply entrenched caste oppression. These two conflicting yet coexisting truths have long shaped India's rural imagination. It is within this contested terrain that the idea of Unnat Bharat Abhiyan (UBA) took root, not as a top-down policy directive, but as a determined initiative by the faculty at the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IITD), committed to sustainable rural development and the use of appropriate technology. A shared vision What began as a campus conversation gradually evolved into a national movement — shaped by higher education institutions, grassroots organisations, educators, practitioners, policymakers, and Union ministries of education and rural development, among others. The objective was to empower rural India through meaningful partnerships between Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) and villages. It also offered academia an opportunity to learn from the lived wisdom, resilience, and practices of rural communities — a symbiotic relationship nurturing both the village and the university. The Unnat Bharat Abhiyan was officially launched in November 2014 by the Ministry of Education. Coordinated by IIT Delhi, it encourages HEIs, designated as Participating Institutes (PIs), to engage with at least five villages each. To support this, a national ecosystem of 14 Subject Expert Groups and 50 Regional Coordinating Institutes provides technical guidance, mentorship, and capacity-building for impactful, sustainable, and context-specific interventions. In its early years, UBA selectively invited HEIs to join the initiative. By 2014–15, 170 PIs were working with 800 villages. The network grew rapidly. By 2017–18, 1,771 institutions engaged 7,893 villages. In April 2018, the programme was opened to all HEIs, significantly expanding its scale, reach, and impact. As of May 2025, 4,183 institutions are working with 19,783 villages across 35 states and union territories. To deepen impact, UBA has forged 18 strategic partnerships with key ministries — such as Panchayati Raj, Rural Development, and Tribal Affairs — and institutions including the National Cooperative Union of India, the Tribal Co-operative Marketing Development Federation of India, the North East Centre for Technology Application and Reach, the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, and the Rural Technology Action Group, among others. Transforming villages The HEIs are working closely with gram sabhas, elected representatives, district officials, and governments. The goal is to partner actively in shaping Gram Panchayat Development Plans (GPDP) and driving meaningful change from the ground up. Their work spans a wide spectrum — from promoting sustainable agriculture and clean energy to enhancing rural livelihoods, improving water and waste management, and facilitating effective implementation of government schemes, and more. The HEIs also help build skills, foster entrepreneurship, support startups, and expand digital literacy across villages. A quiet transformation is unfolding across India, delivering real, measurable change at the grassroots. For instance, in Haridwar's Gaindikhata cluster, IIT Delhi introduced lemongrass cultivation and set up an oil extraction unit, helping farmers earn Rs 8,000–10,000 per month during harvest. In Manipur, the NIT developed a low-cost water purifier providing clean drinking water to over 2,000 villagers previously reliant on a contaminated pond. Meanwhile, in Jharkhand's Chene village, a quiet revival is underway. With support from Jharkhand Rai University, the community has returned to millet farming and established a seed bank to preserve indigenous varieties and ensure long-term food security. Such collaborative, community-driven initiatives blend scientific innovation with local wisdom, proving that real change grows from the ground up. What sets the UBA apart is its emphasis on Village Adhyayan (village study) through Participatory Learning and Action, a people-first, bottom-up way to understand and engage communities. The UBA envisions a shift in how development is practised: Not by imposing top-down solutions, but by listening to and building on the needs and aspirations of rural people themselves. Its core belief is simple yet powerful. Development must serve the people, not sideline or marginalise them. Transforming higher education Through sustained, meaningful engagement, the UBA is redefining higher education's role in India. The programme urges academia to move beyond classrooms and labs, engaging directly with rural life through grounded, empathetic, and socially relevant research. The UBA aims to foster stronger, self-reliant communities while nurturing scholars attuned to rural realities and aspirations. Here, the village is not merely a site for fieldwork or theoretical inquiry; it becomes a dynamic space for collaborative, action-oriented research, where knowledge and solutions are co-created through active community participation. Rural knowledge, lived experiences, and community priorities are no longer peripheral; they actively shape learning, research, and knowledge production within institutions. In its first decade, the Unnat Bharat Abhiyan has made important strides. But much more remains to harness India's vast academic network — over 1,000 universities and more than 42,000 colleges — to engage meaningfully with rural India, where two-thirds of the population lives across more than six lakh villages. Bridging the rural–urban divide demands sustained, equal partnerships between universities and communities. In its second decade, the UBA aims to rapidly expand its reach, especially in remote areas. Only then can we build rural futures rooted in Gandhian self-reliance and Ambedkar's vision of justice and dignity for all. The writers teach at the Centre for Rural Development and Technology, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, and coordinate the Unnat Bharat Abhiyan

Foreign investors raise bets that India stock market rally may stall
Foreign investors raise bets that India stock market rally may stall

Yahoo

time30-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Foreign investors raise bets that India stock market rally may stall

By Vivek Kumar M and Bharath Rajeswaran (Reuters) -Foreign investors are becoming more cautious about the Indian stock market, indicating a three-month rally may run out of legs despite retail traders growing optimistic, according to monthly derivatives data analysed by two brokerages. The Nifty 50 has risen about 12% from March through May, largely due to better-than-expected corporate earnings and easing global trade risks. That is nearly double the 6.6% gain in the MSCI Emerging Markets index in that time. Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) pumped $2.66 billion into Indian equities over that period and cut their short positions on the Nifty. A short seller borrows stock at a higher price betting its value will decline, at which point they buy the stock and pocket the profit. However, FPIs have started the June derivatives series -- which runs from May 30 to June 25 -- with about $2 billion in Nifty index futures shorts, the highest since February, according to Nuvama Alternative and Quantitative Research. In contrast, retail investors and high-net-worth individuals (HNIs), called the client category, turned bullish with long positions worth $1.54 billion on Nifty futures, compared with $546 million in shorts from early May. "This divergence sets up a potential tug-of-war between institutional caution and retail optimism, and could lead to a brief pause in the market rally in June," said Abhilash Pagaria, head of Nuvama. Indeed, the Nifty's gains have weakened in each month -- from 6.3% in March to 3.5% in April and to about 2% in May. "Markets appear to be waiting for some concrete cues before turning bullish," said Sriram Velayudhan, VP at IIFL Securities. Velayudhan expects the Nifty 50 to trade between 24,300 and 25,300 points over the June series, compared with its current level of about 24,800 points. Analysts expect the Nifty to hit new highs by end-2025, but say a correction is likely in the next three months, according to a Reuters poll. Sign in to access your portfolio

Generation Z Cutting Healthcare Spending Amid Economic Uncertainty
Generation Z Cutting Healthcare Spending Amid Economic Uncertainty

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Generation Z Cutting Healthcare Spending Amid Economic Uncertainty

The self-care obsessed generation is forced to forgo mental health services due to increasing financial pressure SAN FRANCISCO, May 21, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Socialtrait, AI-powered consumer insights platform, published a report revealing nearly 60% of Gen Z plan to cut healthcare spending citing rising prices and economic uncertainty. Mental health services, which have been a staple of self-care for younger generations, are reported as the first to be reduced or eliminated. "Financial pressures are overriding long-term wellness considerations for Gen Z in the U.S.," said Vivek Kumar, CEO at Socialtrait. "This study's findings point to critical gaps in healthcare affordability and access, particularly mental health support, which younger Americans increasingly view as negotiable as the economic situation becomes more unpredictable." The survey highlights broader economic implications, as younger consumers' healthcare cutbacks today could lead to escalated costs and health complications tomorrow. This data is a signal for healthcare providers, insurers, employers and policymakers to rethink healthcare access and affordability, particularly mental health services, for younger generations. Participants highlighted financial difficulties caused by high copays significantly impacting their healthcare affordability. Socialtrait conducted the survey using an AI-driven simulated community representative of the general United States population. Each AI persona has their own unique profile and socio-economic characteristics and can respond to questions, provide commentary or interact with other participants. "We build AI agents to act like lenses, allowing us to zoom in on the emotional and cognitive patterns that often go unnoticed," said Kumar. "It's not just about replicating behavior. It's about understanding the why behind it." About Socialtrait Socialtrait leverages AI-driven communities to deliver precise, actionable consumer insights. By facilitating authentic interactions and deeper understanding of consumer behaviors, Socialtrait helps brands, marketers and policymakers respond effectively to evolving market dynamics. Media ContactKsenia Kulik395550@ (919) 349-3786 View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Socialtrait Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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