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J&K cabinet meeting today

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J&K cabinet meeting today

Jammu, Dec 21: Chief Minister Omar Abdullah will preside over a cabinet meeting in Jammu on Monday, December 22, 2025 at 10.30 am.

Though the specific agenda of the cabinet meeting was not yet clear, the buzz in the corridor circles suggested that the issue of regularisation of daily wagers was very likely to come up in its deliberations besides other important agenda items.

This will be the second cabinet meeting after the biannual Darbar move to the winter capital – resumed after a hiatus of over four years.

During the last cabinet meeting on December 3, 2025, the Chief Secretary (CS) was asked to expedite the process to complete the report of the committee headed by him (CS), pertaining to regularisation of the daily wagers of different departments.

In that cabinet meeting, the long-awaited cabinet sub-committee report on reservation was adopted to be sent to the Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha for his approval.

Greater Kashmir

Court dismisses plea against SMVDSB officials

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Court dismisses plea against SMVDSB officials

Jammu, Dec 21: Sub Judge (Judicial Magistrate, First Class) Katra Sidhant Vaid has dismissed a plea seeking directions for registration of an FIR against the Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Shrine Board (SMVDSB) officials for their alleged “criminal negligence resulting in the death of 35 pilgrims (in a landslide incident) at Adhkuwari enroute a Vaishno Devi shrine on August 26, 2025.”

Sub Judge Katra, after perusal of the allegations levelled in the complaint, statements recorded by the police officials and their report, held that the “proximate and the immediate cause of the unfortunate incident was a natural disaster.”

 

Greater Kashmir

President Murmu approves new rural jobs guarantee law

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President Murmu approves new rural jobs guarantee law

New Delhi, Dec 21: The President of India Droupadi Murmu on Sunday gave assent to the Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) (VB – G RAM G) Bill, 2025, marking a significant milestone in the transformation of rural employment policy.

An official spokesman said that the act enhances the statutory wage employment guarantee to 125 days per financial year for rural households and seeks to advance empowerment, inclusive growth, convergence of development initiatives and saturation-based delivery, thereby strengthening the foundation for a prosperous, resilient and self-reliant rural India.

Earlier, the Parliament passed the Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Bill, 2025, marking a decisive reform in India’s rural employment and development framework.

The spokesman said that the act replaces the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), 2005, with a modern statutory framework that enhances livelihood security and is aligned with the national vision of Viksit Bharat @2047.

He said that anchored in the principles of empowerment, growth, convergence and saturation, the act seeks to transform rural employment from a standalone welfare intervention into an integrated instrument of development.

The spokesman said it strengthens income security for rural households, modernises governance and accountability, and links wage employment with the creation of durable and productive rural assets, thereby laying the foundation for a prosperous and resilient rural India.

He said that the salient features of the act include Enhanced Statutory Employment Guarantee under which the act provides a statutory guarantee of not less than 125 days of wage employment per rural household in each financial year to households whose adult members volunteer to undertake unskilled manual work (Section 5(1)).

The spokesman said that this enhancement over the earlier 100-day entitlement significantly strengthens livelihood security, predictability of work, and income stability for rural households, while also enabling them to contribute more effectively and meaningfully to national development.

He said that the Balanced Provision for Agriculture and Rural Labour facilitates adequate availability of agricultural labour during peak sowing and harvesting seasons and that the act empowers states to notify an aggregated pause period aggregating to 60 days in a financial year (Section 6).

The spokesman said that the full 125-day employment guarantee remains intact, to be provided during the remaining period, ensuring a calibrated balance that supports both agricultural productivity and worker security.

He said under the Timely Wage Payments, the act mandates payment of wages on a weekly basis or, in any case, within 15 days of completion of work (Section 5(3)).

The spokesman said that in cases of delay beyond the stipulated period, delay compensation shall be payable in accordance with the provisions laid down in Schedule II, reinforcing wage security and protecting workers from delays.

He said that about the Employment Linked with Productive Rural Infrastructure, the wage employment under the act is explicitly aligned with the creation of durable public assets across four priority thematic domains (Section 4(2) read with Schedule I) water security and water-related works, core rural infrastructure, livelihood-related infrastructure, and works to mitigate extreme weather events.

The spokesman said that all works are planned through a bottom-up process, and all assets created are aggregated into the Viksit Bharat National Rural Infrastructure Stack, ensuring convergence of public investments, avoidance of fragmentation, and outcome-based planning aimed at saturation of critical rural infrastructure, based on varying local needs.

About the Decentralised Planning with National Convergence, he said that all works originate from Viksit Gram Panchayat Plans (VGPPs), prepared at the Gram Panchayat level through participatory processes and approved by the Gram Sabha (Sections 4(1)-4(3)).

The spokesman said that these plans are digitally and spatially integrated with national platforms, including PM Gati Shakti, enabling whole-of-government convergence while fully retaining decentralised decision-making.

He said that this integrated planning framework will enable ministries and departments to plan and implement works more effectively, avoid duplication and wastage of public resources, and accelerate development through saturation-based outcomes.

The spokesman said that Under Reformed Financial Architecture, the act is implemented as a centrally sponsored scheme, to be notified and operationalised by the state governments in accordance with the provisions of the act.

He said that the cost-sharing pattern is 60:40 between the Centre and states, 90:10 for north eastern and Himalayan states, and 100 percent central funding for Union Territories without legislatures.

The spokesman said that funding is provided through state-wise normative allocations based on objective parameters prescribed in the Rules (Sections 4(5) and 22(4)), ensuring predictability, fiscal discipline, and sound planning, while fully preserving statutory entitlements to employment and unemployment allowance.

He said that under the Strengthened Administrative Capacity, the administrative expenditure ceiling has been enhanced from 6 percent to 9 percent, enabling improved staffing, training, technical capacity and field-level support, and strengthening the ability of institutions to deliver outcomes effectively.

“The Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act, 2025, represents a decisive step towards renewing and strengthening India’s rural employment framework in line with the vision of Viksit Bharat @2047. By enhancing the statutory wage employment guarantee to 125 days per financial year, the Act reinforces the right to demand employment while deepening decentralised, participatory governance. It integrates transparent, rule-based funding, accountability mechanisms, technology-enabled inclusion and convergence-driven development to ensure that rural employment not only provides income security but also contributes to sustainable livelihoods, resilient assets and long-term rural prosperity,” the spokesman said.

He said that under Employment Guarantee and Right to Demand, the act does not dilute the right to demand employment.

“On the contrary, Section 5(1) places a clear statutory obligation on the Government to provide not less than 125 days of guaranteed wage employment to eligible rural households. The expansion of guaranteed days, together with strengthened accountability and grievance redressal mechanisms, reinforces the enforceability of this right,” the spokesman said.

Under Normative Funding and Employment Provision, he said that the shift to normative allocations pertains to budgeting and fund-flow mechanisms and does not affect the legal entitlement to employment.

“Sections 4(5) and 22(4) ensure rule-based, predictable allocations while retaining the statutory obligation to provide employment or unemployment allowance,” the spokesman said.

He said that under Decentralisation and Role of Panchayats, the act does not centralise planning or execution. Sections 16 to 19 vest planning, implementation and monitoring authority in Panchayats, Programme Officers and District authorities at appropriate tiers.

“What is integrated at the national level is visibility, coordination and convergence, not local decision-making,” the spokesman said.

He said that about Employment and Asset Creation, the act enshrines an enhanced statutory livelihood guarantee of 125 days, while ensuring that employment contributes to productive, durable and climate-resilient assets. Employment generation and asset creation are designed as mutually reinforcing objectives, supporting long-term rural growth and resilience (Section 4(2) and Schedule I).

Regarding Technology and Inclusion, the spokesman said that technology under the act is intended as an enabling mechanism, not a barrier.

“Sections 23 and 24 provide for technology-enabled transparency through biometric authentication, geo-tagging and real-time dashboards, while Section 20 strengthens social audits by Gram Sabhas, ensuring community oversight, transparency and inclusion,” he said

About Unemployment Allowance, the spokesman said that the act removes earlier dis-entitlement provisions and restores unemployment allowance as a meaningful statutory safeguard.

“Where employment is not provided within the stipulated period, unemployment allowance becomes payable after 15 days,” he said.

The spokesman said that the passage of the Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act, 2025 represents a significant renewal of India’s rural employment guarantee.

He said that by expanding statutory employment to 125 days, embedding decentralised and participatory planning, strengthening accountability, and institutionalising convergence and saturation-based development, the act repositions rural employment as a strategic instrument for empowerment, inclusive growth and the creation of a prosperous and resilient Rural Bharat, fully aligned with the vision of Viksit Bharat @2047.

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Greater Kashmir

Medicinal, aromatic plants have immense potential to boost farmers’ income, livelihood : Devyani Rana

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Medicinal, aromatic plants have immense potential to boost farmers’ income, livelihood : Devyani Rana

Jammu, Dec 21: MLA Nagrota Devyani Rana flagged off an exposure visit of 50 progressive farmers and rural youth from Nagrota Assembly constituency to Punjab Agricultural University (PAU), Ludhiana. The seven-day study tour is being conducted under the Holistic Agriculture Development Programme (HADP) scheme, “Project Promotion of Commercial Cultivation of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants,”.

The exposure visit has been organised to acquaint farmers and rural youth with modern scientific techniques, best practices and commercial prospects in the cultivation, processing and marketing of medicinal and aromatic plants. During the visit, participants will interact with renowned scientists and experts at PAU and gain first-hand knowledge about improved varieties, advanced cultivation practices, value addition, post-harvest management and market-oriented farming.

While flagging off the farmers, Rana said that such initiatives are fully aligned with the broader national vision and the Bharatiya Janata Party’s commitment towards promoting progressive, profitable and sustainable agriculture. She stated that agriculture is undergoing a significant transformation with emphasis on innovation, diversification, enhancement of farmers’ income and active involvement of youth, which is opening new avenues for growth and self-reliance in the rural economy.

MLA Nagrota emphasised that cultivation of high-value crops like medicinal and aromatic plants offers immense potential for augmenting farmers’ incomes and creating new livelihood opportunities. She urged the participants to fully utilize the exposure visit and replicate the learnings on the ground for the benefit of the larger farming community. Rana further emphasised the need to strengthen the agriculture sector in Nagrota constituency through skill development, exposure visits, adoption of modern technology and institutional support, so as to ensure that farmers are able to effectively benefit from government schemes, technical interventions and expert guidance. On the occasion, the District Agriculture Officer, Jammu and Sub Divisional Agriculture Officer (SDAO), Marh were also present. They highlighted the importance of exposure to premier agricultural institutions like PAU and expressed confidence that the visit would help farmers adopt innovative practices and contribute to the overall growth of agriculture in the region.

 

Greater Kashmir

First FCI food-grain freight train reaches Kashmir, offers highway alternative

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First FCI food-grain freight train reaches Kashmir, offers highway alternative

Srinagar, Dec 21: In a significant boost to food security in Kashmir, the first food-grain freight train of the Food Corporation of India (FCI) reached the Anantnag Goods Terminal on Sunday, offering an all-weather supply alternative as frequent closures of the Srinagar-Jammu National Highway disrupt road transport.

The train, dispatched from Ajitwal railway station in Punjab’s Firozpur division, carried 1384 metric tonnes of rice in 21 covered wagons, equivalent to about 57 truckloads, officials said.

Another 42 wagons, carrying around 2600 metric tonnes or nearly 110 truckloads, are expected to arrive soon.

FCI Divisional Manager for Kashmir, K L Mina, said rail transport would reduce both delivery time and transportation costs. “Earlier, moving food grains from Punjab took much longer and was far more expensive,” Mina said. “Rail movement saves time and resources and will help stabilise prices, especially when the highway remains closed.”

Kashmir depends heavily on the Srinagar-Jammu National Highway, its only all-weather road link with the rest of the country. During winter as well as rainy seasons, heavy snowfall, avalanches, landslides, and shooting stones frequently shut the highway for days, delaying supplies of food grains, fuel, and medicines. In the past, prolonged closures have forced authorities to rely on limited and costly airlifting.

Officials said rail-based transport would ease pressure on the highway and help maintain uninterrupted supplies under the Public Distribution System (PDS). “From Anantnag, the food grains will be stored at FCI godowns, including Pampore, and distributed to Srinagar, Baramulla, and other districts, including remote areas,” Mina said. Senior Divisional Commercial Manager of the Jammu Division, Uchit Singhal, said the freight service marked a shift in logistics for Kashmir.

“Rail transportation will ensure faster, cheaper, and more reliable supplies, particularly to far-flung areas,” he said.

Residents welcomed the development, saying regular rail supplies could check price volatility.

“The alternate option would mean prices don’t rise overnight,” said Abdul Rashid, a shopkeeper in Anantnag. “If trains run regularly, markets will remain stable, and people will benefit.” Others urged authorities to increase the frequency of freight trains. “This should not remain a one-time arrangement,” said Farooq Ahmad of Baramulla. “More frequent trains will ensure food security through the winter when roads become unreliable.” Officials cautioned that railways cannot fully replace road transport but said the successful movement of food grains depicts rail’s role as a critical backup supply corridor during extreme weather.

Last week, the Army transported military equipment – tanks and artillery to Kashmir on a military special train, further indicating the expanding use of rail connectivity for logistics in the valley.

Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha congratulated the Indian Railways after the first-ever foodgrain freight train reached Kashmir, carrying approximately 1384 tonnes of rice. LG Sinha said this is undoubtedly a very memorable occasion and realises our long-cherished dream of connecting the Kashmir region to the national freight network.

He observed that the movement of freight trains will benefit people, enterprises, and infrastructure projects without the risk of adverse weather conditions throughout the year and ease the pressure on the Srinagar-Jammu National Highway. The LG expressed gratitude to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Minister of Railways Ashwini Vaishnaw for making the economic progress of J&K an integral part of Bharat’s rapid growth.

Chief Minister Omar Abdullah congratulated the Railways Division Jammu after the first-ever foodgrain freight train reached Kashmir. In a post on microblogging site X, Office of Chief Minister, J&K, posted, “Chief Minister congratulated @Drm_Jamm as, for the first time, a foodgrain freight train of the Food Corporation of India reached Kashmir today, with the first rice rake placed at Anantnag goods shed. The rake comprises 21 wagons carrying about 1,384 tonnes of rice for buffer stock and public distribution.  The Chief Minister said that this will ensure faster transit, reduce pressure on NH-44, and ensure stronger foodgrain supply chain for the Valley.”

 

 

Greater Kashmir

Indian visa application centre suspended indefinitely in Chattogram

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Indian visa application centre suspended indefinitely in Chattogram

Dhaka, Dec 21: India on Sunday suspended visa operations at its mission in Bangladeshi port city of Chattogram until further notice, according to media reports.

The move comes in the wake of a fresh wave of unrest witnessed in the country following the death of prominent youth leader Sharif Osman Hadi.

His death triggered attacks and vandalism across Bangladesh, including stone-hurling at the Assistant Indian High Commissioner’s residence in Chattogram on Thursday.

 

Greater Kashmir

No changes in existing rules for short selling: SEBI

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No changes in existing rules for short selling: SEBI

Mumbai, Dec 21: The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Sunday clarified that there is no change in the existing regulatory framework for short selling.

The market regulator said that “a media article has incorrectly reported about changes in short selling framework which would become applicable from December 22, 2025”.

The SEBI on Wednesday approved a comprehensive overhaul of mutual fund regulations to improve cost transparency and reduce the expense burden on investors.

The changes were cleared by the SEBI board and will be implemented through the new SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 2026, replacing the existing 1996 framework after a detailed review. At the core of the reform is a revamp of the Total Expense Ratio (TER) framework.

The SEBI has approved the exclusion of statutory and regulatory levies — including securities and commodities transaction tax (STT/CTT), GST, stamp duty, SEBI fees and exchange charges — from TER calculations. These levies will now be charged on actuals, over and above the Base Expense Ratio (BER), giving investors a clearer picture of fund management costs.

Under the revised structure, TER will comprise three components: base expense ratio, brokerage costs, and statutory or regulatory levies. The SEBI has also removed the additional 5 basis points (bps) expense allowance that was earlier linked to exit loads.

Greater Kashmir

BNI Kubri lift Milap Sportz Season 4 title

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BNI Kubri lift Milap Sportz Season 4 title

Jammu, Dec 21: BNI Kubri clinched the champions’ title while BNI Abundance finished runners-up as BNI JAMMU KASHMIR MILAP SPORTZ – Season 4, the flagship cricket tournament of BNI Jammu Kashmir, concluded in a grand finale at Greenfield Ground, Gandhi Nagar, marked by competitive cricket, strong camaraderie and a vibrant closing ceremony.

The multi-day cricketing event, as per a statement issued on Sunday, witnessed enthusiastic participation from BNI chapters BNI ABUNDANCE , BNI INSPIRE , BNI ACE , BNI OSCAR & BNI KUBRI – Kashmir attracted strong support from members and spectators, reinforcing the bond of fellowship and collaboration among the business community.

In a memorable finale, BNI Kubri emerged as the champion of Season 4, while BNI Abundance put up a commendable performance to finish as the runner-up. The victory marked a historic milestone for BNI Kubri, making their debut season a truly remarkable one.

Outstanding individual performances were recognised during the closing ceremony.

Irfan Ganai – BNI KUBRI was adjudged the Best Batsman (Orange Cap) after scoring 193 runs and also won the award for Maximum Sixes in the Tournament (18 sixes).

Romaan – BNI KUBRI  dominated with the ball, claiming 13 wickets to win the Best Bowler (Purple Cap) award and was also named Man of the Tournament.

The award for Maximum Sixes in the Final Match was bagged by Aadhaar Gupta- BNI ABUNDANCE

The winners, runner-up team, and individual achievers were felicitated in the presence of BNI members and supporters during the closing ceremony, which reflected the true spirit of sportsmanship and BNI’s globally recognised “Givers Gain” philosophy.

BNI JAMMU KASHMIR reinforced their commitment towards contributing 1% to the GDP of jammu Kashmir by generating 2500 crore of Business through referrals among members.

Greater Kashmir

SED shifts focus to improving learning levels amid achievement gaps

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SED shifts focus to improving learning levels amid achievement gaps

Srinagar, Dec 21: The School Education Department (SED) has shifted its focus toward improving learning levels among students following gaps identified in the National Achievement Survey (NAS) conducted earlier this year.

The Directorate of School Education Kashmir (DSEK) has launched district-level orientation programmes to address the learning deficiencies highlighted by the survey.

The NAS, conducted by PARAKH-NCERT and the Ministry of Education, assesses learning outcomes of students in classes 3, 6, and 9. The district-wise examination evaluates children’s competency in Mathematics, Science, Social Studies, and Languages through an independent examination body appointed by NCERT.

Director School Education Kashmir, Naseer Ahmad Wani, visited Kulgam district on Saturday to oversee an orientation programme aimed at identifying and addressing the gaps pointed out in NAS. The latest survey was conducted across India in December 2023, with results declared in June-July 2024.

“Since NAS assesses district-wise performance, we have started orientation programmes at the district level to chalk out plans for improving students’ learning levels,” Wani said.

He noted that while Kulgam district’s performance was comparatively good, there is always scope for improvement. “We share the NAS data with faculty members and identify which areas need improvement,” Wani said during his Kulgam visit.

Addressing the issue of declining interest in reading and writing, Wani emphasised that cultivating a passion for writing could help reduce excessive screen time among students. “The present generation is more inclined toward screen time, which reduces their interest in writing or reading. If students develop an interest in writing, it will gradually reduce their screen time,” he said. DSEK earlier organised a similar orientation programme at the District Institute of Education and Training (DIET) Beerwah in Budgam to deliberate on improving poor learning outcomes.

“Our main objective is to ensure significant improvement in students’ learning outcomes, which is why we are organising orientation programmes in every district,” Wani added.

Greater Kashmir

NTCA, Project Elephant meetings review tiger, elephant conservation at Sundarbans

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NTCA, Project Elephant meetings review tiger, elephant conservation at Sundarbans

New Delhi, Dec 21: The 28th meeting of the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) and the 22nd Steering Committee meeting of Project Elephant were held on Sunday at the Sundarbans Tiger Reserve in West Bengal under the chairmanship of Union Minister for Environment, Forest and Climate Change Bhupender Yadav.

The meetings brought together senior officials, scientists and field experts from tiger and elephant range states, along with representatives of key conservation institutions, to assess progress under Project Tiger and Project Elephant and to chart future conservation strategies.

Chairing the NTCA meeting, Yadav highlighted India’s globally recognised tiger conservation model, stressing the need for science-based management, landscape-level planning, community participation, inter-state coordination and international cooperation. The minutes of the 27th NTCA meeting held in April 2025 were confirmed and the action taken report was reviewed. The NTCA discussed outcomes of four regional meetings, focusing on challenges faced by tiger reserves, including human–tiger conflict, staff shortages, financial constraints, habitat degradation and invasive species. Measures to mitigate conflict, including a three-pronged strategy and the launch of the project ‘Management of Tigers Outside Tiger Reserves’, were reviewed, with directions issued to states for follow-up action.

 

Greater Kashmir

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