Sunday, January 2, 2022

UPI transactions hit a new record in Dec 2021

 

UPI transactions hit a new record in Dec 2021



Mumbai:

02.02.2022

Transactions under the Unified Payments Interface hit a record high of 456 crores in December 2021surpassing the earlier high of 421 crore seen in October 2021. The total value of transactions December as also a new record at Rs 8. 27 lakh crore. According to bankers, the surge in transactions is a reflection of increasing adoption as well the rise in economic activity in December following the sharp drop in second wave cases. UPI transactions had hit a record in October driven festival season purchases.

TNN

‘A plane taking off without ATC nod is serious’

 ‘A plane taking off without ATC nod is serious’


02.02.2021

A senior pilot said, “A serious thing has happened, a plane taking off without ATC clearance. The probe will ascertain how this happened and who is at fault. Was it a communication gap, error or something else needs to be found as such a thing cannot be allowed to be repeated. ”

ATC gives clearance for an aircraft to land or take off after after ascertaining, among other things, that the runway is clear with no vehicle, other plane or person being there.

“Pilots initiate push back of an aircraft after getting ATC nod. Then engine start-up is also done with their permission. The ATC then gives permission to line up (be absolutely ready to take off) and subsequently to take off,’’ said another senior commander.

SpiceJet’s Rajkot-Delhi flight takes off sans nod

New Delhi: The last year ended on a dramatic note for Indian aviation with a passenger aircraft taking off without air traffic control (ATC) clearance. This incident happened when a SpiceJet flight took off from Rajkot for Delhi without the mandatory nod on the penultimate day of 2021 — December 30. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) is probing this serious lapse.

“A SpiceJet Q400 (VTSUQ) operating Rajkot-Delhi as SJ-3703 on December 30, 2021, took off from Rajkot without ATC clearance. The pilots have been being of rostered(taken off flying duty) pending investigation,” said people in the know. A senior DGCA official said “strict action” will be taken against those found responsible for the lapse based on the outcome of the probe.
A SpiceJet spokesman said, “Pilots have been off rostered pending an inquiry.”

Resident docs protest against HoD

 Resident docs protest against HoD


TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:

02.02.2021

In a protest move, resident doctors at ENT department of BJ Medical College and Civil Hospital treated patients outside the Out Patient Department (OPD) on Saturday.

The resident doctors put up posters and banners a bout the ‘ harassment’ meted out to them by the head of the department for ENT, Dr Ila Upadhyay.
“Despite complaints to the college authorities, Dr Upadhyay continued to mentally torment us on Friday. As a result, we have decided to stage a protest while continuing to treat patients outside the ENT OPD,” said a resident doctor in the ENT department.

In a letter to the faculty dean, Gujarat University, the Junior Doctors’ Association recently alleged that Dr Upadhyay asked one of her students, resident doctor Saurabh Banerjee to gift her a micro-meter drill set. The association demanded immediate action against the faculty failing which they had threatened to stage a protest.

In a separate letter to the college a uthorities, signed by ENT department students, they have written about alleged harassment in the department under the HoD.

₹9.75L stolen from bank in Kalupur

 

₹9.75L stolen from bank in Kalupur


TIMES NEWS NETWORK


Ahmedabad:

02.02.2021

A theft of Rs 9. 75 lakh was reported from the Kalupur branch of Vijaya Bank, now merged with Bank of Baroda. The branch manager, Anil Patel, stated that the theft took place between 5. 30pm on Thursday and 9. 30am on Friday.

Patel stated that that has been the branch manager for the past 18 months. He said the branch is usually opened regularly by the cashier, Hasmukh Patel, in the presence of Class IV employee Bipin Patel. In the evening, the cash is counted and high denominations notes are put in a safe and small denominations are put in a cupboard in same room, the cash room, and the room is locked by Bipin in the presence of the cashier and the manager.

He stated that the keys to the main door are with two Class IV employees, Bipin and Vimal, while the keys to the cash room stay with him and the cashier. He said there are six CCTV cameras, but the data storage responsibility has been given to an external agency.

On Thursday, Rs 1. 61 crore cash was counted and no- tes of Rs 100, 200, 500 and 2,000, worth Rs1. 03 crore were put in the safe. Notes of the Rs 10, 20 and 50 denominations, worth Rs 58. 5 lakh, were kept in the cupboard. The cash room was locked. On Thursday, as usual, the cash room and the branch were locked.

He stated that on Friday morning he got call a call from Vimal, saying that someone had broken the lock on the main door. He stated that when they entered the bank, they found the cash room door open and the door of the cupboard was bent from the middle. Later, when the cash was counted, Rs 9. 75 lakh in notes of Rs 50 was missing.

Omicron Hits 2022 Festivities, But Not Hope


Omicron Hits 2022 Festivities, But Not Hope


If Nations End Vax Inequity: WHO

02.02.2021

The Omicron variant dampened New Year festivities around much of the world, with Paris cancelling its fireworks show, London relegating its to television, and New York City scaling down its famous ball drop celebration in Times Square.

The illuminated ball made of Waterford crystal panels slid down its pole at the midnight hour in Times Square, but only 15,000 spectators were allowed into the official viewing area instead of the usual 58,000. A year ago, the newly available vaccine offered hope that the Covid-19 pandemic may be under control by the start of 2022. Instead, the sudden arrival of Omicron has brought a surge in coronavirus cases across the globe.

Worldwide infections hit a record high over the past seven-day period, with an average of just over a million cases detected a day between December 24 and 30, up some 100,000 on the previous peak posted on Wednesday, according to Reuters data. Deaths, however, have not risen in kind, bringing hope the new variant is less lethal. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that he is optimistic that the Covid-19 pandemic will be defeated in 2022, provided countries work to- gether to contain its spread.

Ghebreyesus warned against “narrow nationalism and vaccine hoarding” in his New Year statement. His comments come two years since the WHO was first notified of cases of an unknown pneumonia strain in China. He warned that continuing inequity in vaccine distribution was increasing the risk of the virus evolving. “If we end inequity, we end the pandemic. ”

New York City reported a record 44,000 cases on Wednesday and another 43,000 on Thursday, leading some critics to question whether the celebrations should go ahead at all. But officials decided an outdoor party of vaccinated, masked and socially distant revellers was safe, and a better option than the virtually vacant celebration that rung in 2021. “I would be lying if I said I’m not concerned,” said Sue Park, a student who was one of the 15,000 allowed to watch in person. “But I think it’s worth it to come and celebrate. ”

President Joe Biden noted the losses and uncertainty caused by the pandemic but said: “We’re persevering. We’re recovering”. “Back to work. Back to school. Back to joy,” he said in a video posted on Twitter. “That’s how we made it through this year. And how we’ll embrace the next. Together. ”
Elsewhere around the globe, events were scaled back or cancelled outright, such as with the traditional fireworks over the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur. Midnight passed in Paris without a planned fireworksdisplayor DJsets, as officials cancelled events planned on the Champs-Elysees following the advice of a scientific panel that declared mass gatherings would be too risky.

In the Netherlands, where outside groupings of more than four people are banned, police dispersed several thousand people who had defiantly gathered at Amsterdam’s central Dam Square, ANP news agency reported. But in London, where a fireworks display and light show had been cancelled in October, officials announced on Friday the spectacle would come to life on the television screen, as Big Ben rang in the New Year for the first time since 2017 following a restoration. BBC images of fireworks showed very light vehicle traffic and virtually no in-person spectators.

Cape Town abruptly lifted a curfew just in time for the New Year, after South Africa became the first country to declare its Omicron wave had crested — and with no huge surge in deaths. South Africa had first raised the alarm about the new fast-spreading variant racing around the world.

In Berlin, police urged people not to gather near the Br- andenburg Gate, where a concert was staged without a live audience. Under sunny skies at the Vatican on New Year’s Day, Pope Francis encouraged people to focus on the good while acknowledging that the pandemic has left many struggling. “We’re still living in uncertain and difficult times due to the pandemic,” the 85-yearold pontiff told crowds gathered in Saint Peter’s Square.

People in Madrid queued for hours to get into the main Puerta del Sol square where celebrations went ahead with multiple security checkpoints, mandatory masks and capacity at 60% of nor mal levels. Saul Pedrero, a 34-year old clerk, made the trip from Barcelona, which has some of Spain’s strictest controls, including a 1am curfew. “It seems like another country. ”

In Asia, celebrations were mostly abridged or cancelled. In South Korea’s Seoul, a traditional midnight bell-ringing event was cancelled for the second year, while festivities were banned in Tokyo’s glittering Shibuya district. Dubai went ahead with its celebrations undeterred, with 36 firework displays at 29 locations. But authorities warned they would fine anyone not wearing a mask. Hope remains that 2022 may bring a new, less deadly phase of pandemic. “Hopefully 2022 is going to be better,” said Oscar Ramirez, 31, in Sydney. “Everyone in the world needs a big change. ”

AGENCIES

Arts, science colleges get more job offers from IT companies

 Arts, science colleges get more job offers from IT companies


Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

Chennai:

02.02.2021

It is not just engineering students who are in demand, students pursuing arts and science courses are also in demand with number of companies and offers showing an increase compared to last year.

IT majors Wipro, Infosys, TCS and accounting firms such as Deloitte, Ernst and Young are queuing up to recruit final year students pursuing BCom, BSc computer science, BCA, BSc math and BA English.

They are hiring for roles such as finance analyst, audit associate, data analyst, tax consultant, content writer, associate software engineer and personal banker.

In a new trend this year, IT companies are recruiting for non-IT portfolios like consulting, auditing and data science. Due to more demand, the pay packages also increased.

At Women's Christian College, six companies gave120 job offers so far against 104 offers from19 companies last year.

SBI (sales based openings), Infosys, Wipro, ICICI and Deloitte, NielsonIQ have come for campus placements and offered wider portfolios like financial analyst, audit associate. “It is a bright start to the placement season. IT and audit companies are hiring more students during the campus placements this year. Companies also offer wider portfolios which has resulted in more job offers for students,” said Mer- cy Evangeline, assistant professor and a member of the placement team at WCC.

Loyola College has received more than 300 offers this year from 40 companies against 430 offers from 110 companies last year. The college has another 50 companies on the pipeline and the job offers are expected to cross last year's.

“This year IT firms are hiring for non-IT portfolios such as consulting and auditing. There is more demand for students from data science, statistics and mathematics,” said V Durga Rajulu, director, training and placement, Loyola College.

The highest pay-package was offered by Accenture to a BSC maths student who received Rs13. 9 lakh per annum. "The average pay package has increased from Rs5 lakhs per annum to Rs7lakhs per annum. Companies are offering better pay packages due to the need for freshers to work in newer projects,” he said.

There is also a good demand for English literature students as many companies hire content writers. “Besides financial services and IT jobs, there is a good demand for content writers. Companies like Wipro and Accenture are also hiring content writers this year,” said C Amirthavalli, placement officer, Madras Christian College. Students from BA, MA English and communication are being preferred for content roles.

Pondy varsity saves ₹1cr yearly after installing solar plant

 

Pondy varsity saves ₹1cr yearly after installing solar plant


TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Puducherry:

02.01.2021

Pondicherry University saves more than ₹1 crore per annum on electricity bills after the commissioning of solar power plants with a total capacity of 2. 4MW at a cost of ₹13 crore.

Renewable energy service company (Resco), an energy service company, which provides energy to consumers from renewable energy sources, has developed, installed and financed the project. The company operates and owns the rooftop solar power project and supplies power generated from the project to the university.

Resco has installed rooftop solar plants in 15 buildings, car porch in two areas in various locations in the university. The university roughly spends ₹75 lakh per month on electricity.

"This initiative has yielded fruitful results. Now, one third of the power requirement of Pondicherry University will be met through nonconventional energy generat- for captive consumption. It has also resulted in conservation of one-third of energy cost using world-class electrical infrastructure with least power disruption and less maintenance cost. Above all, carbon emission to the extent of 2,900 ton per year will be avoided in this green campus," said assistant registrar (public relations) K Mahesh.

He said vice-chancellor Gurmeet Singh after taking charge evinced keen interest in the use of non-conventional energy sources.

SC orders all-India audit of pvt & deemed universities Focus On Structural Opacity & Examining Role Of Regulatory Bodies

SC orders all-India audit of pvt & deemed universities Focus On Structural Opacity & Examining Role Of Regulatory Bodies   Manash.Go...