8th phase of Khalistan Referendum being held in UK cities today

Islamabad, January 09, 2022 (PPI-OT):The 8th phase of Khalistan Referendum is going to be held in the UK cities of Leeds and Luton, today. A report released by Kashmir Media Service, today, said a referendum for a separate Sikh homeland started from London on 31st Oct 2021 and over 30,000 Sikhs participated in the first phase of Khalistan referendum in London.

It said, the overall figure of votes cast in Khalistan Referendum has crossed 200,000 mark, so far, adding massive participation of Sikhs in referendum has unnerved Modi-led fascist Indian regime. The report said that Indian attempts to stop Sikh referendum exercise in the UK failed miserably as Modi tried hard to stop the referendum in the UK. Khalistan referendum seeks votes from Sikh Diaspora for separate homeland for Sikhs.

The Sikh referendum will also take place in future in the US, Canada, Australia and the Indian Punjab, it added. The report maintained that Khalistan referendum had sent a strong message to India to end discrimination against Sikhs, saying its findings would be shared with the UN and other international bodies to create wider consensus.

It said, Sikh demand for a separate homeland is in complete consonance with the UN Charter and India cannot stop Sikhs from getting their birth right of freedom. The report said, Sikh separate homeland in the name of Khalistan is the writing on the wall.

For more information, contact:
Kashmir Media Service
Phone: +92-51-4435548, +92-51-4435549
Fax: +92-51-4861736
Email: info@kmsnews.org
Website: www.kmsnews.org

Power breakdown, road blockade in IIOJK expose authorities: CPI-M

Srinagar, January 09, 2022 (PPI-OT):In Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir, the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) has said the tall claims made by the authorities on their alertness have been exposed by the power breakdown, road blockades, scarcity of ration and other difficulties faced by the people.

The CPI-M leader, Mohammad Yousuf Tarigami in a statement issued in Srinagar said that although a heavy snowfall is not something new for the region but tall claims being made prove a prank. Referring to the massive power breakdown that had plunged the entire valley into total darkness, he said that the authorities failed to restore power supplies.

The CPI (M) leader wondered that with a few inches of snow the entire administration comes to a grinding halt which is reflective of a dire need for strengthening of disaster preparedness in Kashmir. “The snow is yet to be cleared on many roads and a major road network in rural areas across the valley is yet to see the traffic plying resulting into tremendous inconvenience for the general public,” he lamented.

Meanwhile, Kishtwar, Ramban and Doda districts of Chenab valley also witnessed rain and heavy snowfall as a result of which the cold wave engulfed the whole area while majority of the areas witnessed electricity blackout as well.

Reports said, Kishtwar town and its adjoining areas witnessed massive snowfall during last intervening night while areas like Bhujwah, Chatroo, Padder, Nagsni of Kishtwar District, Gandoh, Bhaderwah, Marmat, Dessa and other areas of Doda district also witnessed heavy to moderate snowfall and thus brings an end to long dry spell after the area witnessed season first snowfall last month.

Similarly major areas of Ramban district also witnessed heavy snowfall as a result of which the traffic on Jammu-Srinagar highway was stopped by the authorities due to slippery condition of the road as well as massive landslides.

For more information, contact:
Kashmir Media Service
Phone: +92-51-4435548, +92-51-4435549
Fax: +92-51-4861736
Email: info@kmsnews.org
Website: www.kmsnews.org

Kupwara upper reaches remain cut off

Srinagar, January 09, 2022 (PPI-OT):In Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir, the fresh snowfall has disrupted life across Kupwara district, increasing hardships faced by people while higher reaches of the district continued to remain cut off from the district headquarters. Disruption of power and drinking water in the majority of the areas resulted in inconvenience to people.

The higher reaches, including Karnah, Keran, Machil, Jumgund, Kumkadi, Batnard Khurhama and Mankal, remained cut off from the district headquarters. People from different areas, including Lolab, Kralpora, Haril, Hangnikote, Sarmarg, Behnipora, Hafrada and Falmarg, said that the authorities failed to clear snow from roads with the result they faced inconvenience.

For more information, contact:
Kashmir Media Service
Phone: +92-51-4435548, +92-51-4435549
Fax: +92-51-4861736
Email: info@kmsnews.org
Website: www.kmsnews.org

Punjab assembly polls: 50 Indian force companies to arrive tomorrow 

Chandigarh, January 09, 2022 (PPI-OT):The Punjab Chief Electoral Officer, S Karuna Raju has said of the 75 companies allotted to Punjab, 50 would reach the state tomorrow (Monday). S Karuna Raju held a meeting with DCs-cum-DEOs and CPs/SSPs and issued directions to ensure its compliance in letter and spirit.

Raju also brought all Election Commission’s guidelines to the notice of the Chief Secretary and other senior officials. He said an app, cVIGIL, had been launched and the complaints registered on it would be redressed within 100 minutes. Highlighting that static surveillance teams and flying squads have been made operational all across the state to check violations of the model code of conduct, he said adequate security forces would be deployed for free and fair elections.

The CEO said as per the EC’s directions, no rallies would be held till January 15. He said there would be zero tolerance for any violation and action under the Disaster Management Act would be taken against anyone found violating Covid norms.

For more information, contact:
Kashmir Media Service
Phone: +92-51-4435548, +92-51-4435549
Fax: +92-51-4861736
Email: info@kmsnews.org
Website: www.kmsnews.org

BJP has set up several ‘factories’ of hate: Rahul

New Delhi, January 09, 2022 (PPI-OT):Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has said that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has set up several ‘factories’ of hate and the ‘Tek Fog’ app is one of them. Rahul Gandhi in a tweet in Hindi said, the entire country is wondering where so much hate is coming from, going by the age of the accused in the ‘Bulli Bai’ app case that targeted women of a particular religion.

“Looking at the young age of the accused in the BulliBaiApp case, the entire country is asking where so much hatred comes from. In fact, the BJP has set up many factories of hate. Tek Fog is one of them,” Gandhi said in a tweet. He tagged a report that said ‘Tek Fog’ is BJP’s helpful app that has given the power to the ‘cyber army’ to spread hatred and tinker with the trends on social media.

The Congress has already demanded answers from the government over the app and asked the Indian Supreme Court to intervene. In the ‘Bulli Bai’ case, doctored photographs of hundreds of Muslim women were uploaded for ‘auction’ on an app called ‘Bulli Bai’, hosted on open-source software platform GitHub.

For more information, contact:
Kashmir Media Service
Phone: +92-51-4435548, +92-51-4435549
Fax: +92-51-4861736
Email: info@kmsnews.org
Website: www.kmsnews.org

Taliban arrest Afghan professor after social media criticism

Published by
Al-Araby

A prominent Afghan university professor who openly criticised the Taliban’s hardline regime has been arrested in Kabul, a spokesman for the government said. Professor Faizullah Jalal has made several appearances on television talk shows since the previous US-backed government was ousted in August, blaming the Taliban for the worsening financial crisis and criticising them for ruling by force. Since returning to power, the Taliban have cracked down on dissent, forcefully dispersing women’s rights protests and briefly detaining several Afghan journalists. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid twe…

Read More

EU Under Pressure on ‘Ghost Flights’

The European Union is under increasing pressure to further ease rules on airport take-off and landing slots to cut the number of “ghost flights” airlines are running to retain them.

Carriers say the requirement for them to use 50% of their slots — down from 80% in pre-pandemic days — or lose them is forcing them to operate empty or half-empty flights.

A sluggish return to air travel, as travelers shrink away from the omicron COVID variant and quickly changing rules for passengers, is dragging out the practice longer than they planned.

Belgium’s Brussels Airlines, for instance, says it will have to operate 3,000 under-capacity flights up to the end of March.

Its parent company Lufthansa warned last month it expected it would have to run 18,000 “pointless flights” over the European winter.

Belgium’s transport minister, Georges Gilkinet, has written to the European Commission urging it to loosen the slot rules, arguing the consequences run counter to the EU’s carbon-neutral ambitions.

The current reduced quotas were introduced in March last year in a nod to the hardship airlines faced as COVID washed over Europe for a second year running, shriveling passenger numbers.

In December, the commission said the 50% threshold would be raised to 64% for this year’s April-to-November summer flight season.

“Despite our urgings for more flexibility at the time, the EU approved a 50%-use rule for every flight schedule/frequency held for the winter. This has clearly been unrealistic in the EU this winter against the backdrop of the current crisis,” a spokesperson for the International Air Transport Association (IATA) told AFP.

He said the commission needed to show more “flexibility … given the significant drop in passengers and impact of omicron numbers on crewing planned schedules.”

But a commission spokesperson on Wednesday said the EU executive believed “the overall reduced consumer demand… is already reflected in a much-reduced rate of 50% compared to the usual 80%-use rate rule.”

The spokesperson, Daniel Ferrie, said: “The Commission expects that operated flights follow consumer demand and offer much needed continued air connectivity to citizens.”

Source: Voice of America

US Economy Shows Strength Entering 2022, but Pandemic Clouds Future

At the start of 2022 most measures show the U.S. economy is booming, with an unemployment rate that is approaching record lows and a demand for goods that has imports from the rest of the world surging.

On Friday, the Labor Department announced that the unemployment rate had fallen to 3.9% in December, even as the economy produced a smaller-than-expected increase of 199,000 new jobs. The report came a day after the Commerce Department announced that U.S. imports in November had increased by 4.6% over the previous month to $304.4 billion.

The rising level of imports contributed to a trade deficit of $80.2 billion for the month, which is close to the record high of $81.4 billion set in September. While a large trade deficit is seen as a negative by many, particularly former President Donald Trump, who went to great lengths to close the gap between imports and exports, economists say it points to a U.S. economy that is leading the global recovery from the pandemic-induced recession.

“When we do better than everybody else, we get a bigger trade deficit,” said economist Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow with the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

US as economic engine

It’s a popular misconception that a trade deficit is a sign of bad economic times in the United States, Hufbauer told VOA. “Not at all. It’s an indicator of great times in the U.S., relative to other countries. And that’s exactly where we are. We’re doing very well, relative to other countries, so the dollar tends to be stronger, that tends to increase the trade deficit, because demand is greater.”

The benefits of a strong U.S. economy are felt around the world, as other countries find U.S. consumers eager to purchase their goods.

China, as usual, was the largest net beneficiary of the U.S. trade deficit, selling U.S. consumers $28.4 billion more than it purchased. The U.S. ran a significant trade deficit with other trade partners as well, including the European Union, at $19.4 billion; Mexico, at $11 billion; Germany, at $6.1 billion; and Canada, at $5.4 billion.

The U.S. runs a trade surplus with only a few partners. The largest is a $4.5 billion surplus with all of Central and South America. The only other surpluses of $1 billion or more are with Hong Kong, at $1.6 billion, and Brazil, at $1.0 billion.

Job growth continues

The monthly jobs report from the Department of Labor, released Friday, told a similar story of an economy that continues to demonstrate a strong recovery from the pandemic recession. The 199,000 figure for the month of December was lower than expected but contributed to an average of about 537,000 jobs per month over all of 2021.

All told, the unemployment rate fell from 6.4% at the beginning of the year to 3.9% in December.

Not all of the decline in unemployment can be attributed to job growth. Millions of American workers dropped out of the labor force, largely as a result of the pandemic. That means that even though the unemployment rate is low, there are still about 3.6 million fewer workers in the U.S. than there were in the months prior to the beginning of the pandemic.

“We still have aways to go in terms of absorbing the labor force, and people who’ve left the labor force, as well as population growth, but it’s certainly a positive sign,” said Elise Gould, senior economist with the Economic Policy Institute, a Washington think tank.

On a more sobering note, the report revealed that when it comes to employment, the economic recovery has not been evenly distributed. From November to December, the unemployment rate among Black Americans rose from 6.1% to 6.5%. The problem is particularly acute among Black women, who face an unemployment rate of 5.6%, double the rate of white women.

Omicron is wild card

What the most recent economic data cannot yet tell us is the degree to which the surging omicron variant of the coronavirus has had on U.S. employment. The Labor Department uses a “reference week” each month when calculating job numbers, and the reference week in December was unusually early, encompassing Dec. 5-11, before the omicron surge began in earnest.

“Most of it happened in the second half of the month,” Gould told VOA. “So, it’s really not being reflected here at all. On February 4, when the January data comes out, I’m sure we will see a pretty big impact — hopefully a short-lived one — but probably a significant impact on the labor market.”

Source: Voice of America