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15 injured in bus accident in Jammu

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15 injured in bus accident in Jammu

Jammu, Aug 23: At least 15 passengers were injured in a bus accident in Jammu district on Saturday.

A police official told Greater Kashmir that a bus on its way to Jammu from Arnia veered off the road and crashed into a field in Kalyana village.

All 15 passengers sustained injuries in the accident, the official added.

Greater Kashmir

Being Muslim and American in the nation’s heartland

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Being Muslim and American in the nation's heartland

Cedar Rapids, Aug 22: The oldest surviving place of worship for Muslims in the United States is a white clapboard building on a grassy corner plot, as unassumingly Midwestern as its neighbouring houses in Cedar Rapids – except for a dome.

The descendants of the Lebanese immigrants who constructed “the Mother Mosque” almost a century ago — along with newcomers from Afghanistan, East Africa and beyond — are defining what it can mean to be both Muslim and American in the nation’s heartland just as heightened conflicts in the Middle East fuel tensions over immigration and Islam in the United States.

Standing by the door in a gold-embroidered black robe, Fatima Igram Smejkal greeted the faithful with a cheerful “salaam” as they hurried into the Islamic Centre of Cedar Rapids for Friday prayers.

In 1934, her family helped open what the National Register of Historic Places calls “the first building designed and constructed specifically as a house of worship for Muslims in the United States.”

“They all came from nothing… so they wanted to give back,” Smejkal said of families like hers, who arrived at the turn of the 20th century. “That’s why I’m so kind to the ones that come in from Somalia and the Congo and Sudan and Afghanistan. I have no idea what they left, what they’re thinking when they walk in that mosque.”

The community now gathers in the Islamic Centre. It was built in the 1970s when they became too many for the Mother Mosque’s living-room-sized prayer hall, and now they’re have outgrown its prayer hall, as well.

Hundreds of fifth-generation Muslim Iowans, recent refugees and migrants pray on industrial carpets rolled onto the gym’s basketball court — the elderly on walkers, babies in car seats, women in headscarves and men sporting headgear from African kufi and Afghan pakol caps to baseball hats.

This physical space where diverse groups gather helps sustain community as immigrants try to preserve their heritage while assimilating into US culture and society.

“You can be a Muslim that’s practicing your religion and still coexist with everybody else around you,” said Hassan Igram, who chairs the centre’s board of trustees.

He shares the same first and last names as his grandfather and Smejkal’s grandfather – two cousins who came to Iowa as boys in the 1910s.

Lebanese migrants ‘Mother Mosque’

Tens of thousands of young men, both Christians and Muslims, settled in booming Midwestern towns after fleeing the Ottoman Empire, many with little more than a Bible or a Quran in their bags.

They often worked selling housewares off their backs to widely scattered farms, earning enough to buy horses and buggies, and then opened grocery stores.

Through bake sales and community dinners, a group of Muslim women raised money in the 1920s to build what was called the “Moslem Temple”. Like the Igrams, Anace Aossey remembers attending prayer there with his parents – though as children they were more focused on the Dixie Cream donuts that would follow.

“We weren’t raised real strict religiously,” said Aossey, whose father sold goods along the tracks from a 175-pound sack. “They were here to integrate themselves into the American society.”

Growing up Muslim in America

Muslims sometimes faced institutional discrimination. After serving in World War II, Smejkal’s father, Abdallah Igram, successfully campaigned for soldiers’ dog tags to include Muslim as an option, along with Catholic, Protestant and Jewish.

But in Cedar Rapids, immigrants found mutual acceptance, fostered through houses of worship and friendships between US-born children and their non-Muslim neighbours.

Smejkal’s best friend was Catholic, and her father kept beef hot dogs in the kitchen to respect the Muslim prohibition against pork. Smejkal’s father, in turn, made sure Friday meals included fish sticks.

“Arab-speaking Muslims were part and parcel of the same stories that inform our sense of what the Midwest is and its values are,” said Indiana University professor Edward E Curtis, IV. “They participated in the making of the American heartland.”

Abdallah Igram is buried in the city’s hilltop Muslim cemetery, among the first in the United States when it was built in the 1940s.

It’s next to the Czech cemetery – for the descendants of the migrants who helped establish Cedar Rapids in the 1850s — and the Jewish cemetery, whose operators donated trees to the Muslim one after damage from a derecho five years ago. Smejkal wishes the whole world’s faiths could collaborate this way.

“That’s when there’s no barriers anymore. I pray one day it’s really like that,” Smejkal said.

Being Muslim in the Heartland

The Muslim presence across the Midwest grew exponentially after a 1965 immigration law eliminated the quotas that had blocked arrivals from many parts of the world since the mid-1920s, Curtis said.

Mistrust flared again after the Sept 11, 2001, attacks, especially in farming communities whose young people were fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq, said Ako Abdul-Samad, an African-American who represented Des Moines for nearly two decades in the Iowa House of Representatives.

He feared being Muslim would prevent his election when he first ran for office, but voters re-elected him again and again.

Immigration, including from Muslim countries, remains a contentious issue, even as Muslim communities flourish and increase their political influence in major cities like Minneapolis and Detroit.

But daily interactions between Muslims and their neighbours have provided some protection from prejudice, according to the Mother Mosque imam, a Palestinian who immigrated in the 1980s. “Stereotypes and things did not work” in Cedar Rapids, Taha Tawil said.

Bosnian Muslims say they’ve had similar experiences near Des Moines, where a new multimillion dollar mosque and cultural centre is opening next month, an expansion of the first centre established by war refugees 20 years ago.

“Our neighbours have been great to us, including the farmers we got the land from,” said its treasurer, Moren Blazevic. “We’re finally Iowans.”

Becoming Midwesterners

Faroz Waziri jokes that he and his wife Mena might have been the first Afghans in town when they came in the mid-2010s on a special visa for those who had worked for the US armed forces overseas.

After struggling with “culture shock” and language barriers, they’ve become naturalised US citizens, and he’s the refugee resources manager at a non-profit founded by Catholic nuns.

While grateful for the aid and the safety they feel, the Waziris miss their families and homeland. And they fear that cultural differences — especially the individualism Americans express, like when they sit around a table for meals, instead of together on a rug — remain too vast.

“Mentally and emotionally, I never think I’m American,” said Mena Waziri. She’s a college graduate now, and loves the independence and women’s rights that remain unattainable in Taliban-run Afghanistan. But the family is keen for their US-born son, Rayan, to have Muslim friends and values.

These tensions are familiar for the descendants of the city’s first Muslim settlers, like Aossey, who keeps exhibit panels about Lebanese immigration and integration in the same garage where he stores ATVs on his recreational farm.

“My story is the American story,” Aossey said. “It’s not the Islamic story.”

Greater Kashmir

Army Chief to visit Algeria to boost defence cooperation

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Army Chief to visit Algeria to boost defence cooperation

New Delhi, Aug 23: General Upendra Dwivedi, Chief of the Army Staff (COAS), will pay an official visit to Algeria next week, marking his first overseas tour since the successful conclusion of Operation Sindoor. The visit reflects India’s growing emphasis on strengthening strategic engagements with key partners abroad.

According to the Ministry of Defence, the Army Chief’s discussions in Algiers will focus on deepening Army-to-Army cooperation, expanding training exchanges, and enhancing capability development initiatives. Given Algeria’s operation of equipment similar to India’s, both sides are expected to explore collaboration in training, maintenance support, and defence technologies.

The visit will also cover prospects for defence industrial partnerships, particularly in modernisation, logistics and equipment support. General Dwivedi is expected to share India’s approach of “zero tolerance for terrorism” while exchanging views on regional and global security challenges.

Algeria is regarded by New Delhi as a natural partner in its outreach to Africa and the Mediterranean, with its pivotal role in the Maghreb–Sahel region and its strong positions in the African Union and the Non-Aligned Movement.

Defence officials noted that Algeria’s robust military capabilities and strategic geography make it a key partner for advancing peace and stability in the wider region. The visit follows recent trips by the President of India and the Chief of Defence Staff to Algiers, which set the stage for expanded cooperation. Defence officials said General Dwivedi’s engagement is expected to inject fresh momentum into bilateral ties, reinforcing the principles of sovereignty, non-alignment and South–South cooperation while laying the foundation for long-term defence collaboration.

Greater Kashmir

Sri Lanka’s ex-president Ranil Wickremesinghe arrested over misuse of funds

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Sri Lanka’s ex-president Ranil Wickremesinghe arrested over misuse of funds

New Delhi, Aug 23: Sri Lanka’s former president Ranil Wickremesinghe was arrested on Friday on charges of misusing public funds during his foreign travels while in office, police said.

The 76-year-old, who served as president from 2022 to 2024, faces three charges linked to overseas trips, including a 2023 stopover in the UK after attending the G77 summit in Cuba. The Criminal Investigations Department (CID) alleges that the visit, which included a university ceremony attended with his wife, was private but funded by the state, a claim Wickremesinghe denies.

He was produced before a Colombo magistrates’ court and remanded in custody, despite seeking bail on health grounds.

According to police, he made 23 foreign trips as president at a cost of over Rs 600 million.

Wickremesinghe, who previously served six terms as prime minister, is the first former president of Sri Lanka to be arrested. He is credited with helping stabilise the economy after the 2022 crisis that forced Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee, though he lost the 2024 presidential election to leftist leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake.

Greater Kashmir

J&K Bank organises Mega Camp on Financial Inclusion at Jammu

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Powered by Pine Labs, J&K Bank introduces RuPay credit card

Jammu, Aug 22: Reinforcing its commitment towards deepening financial inclusion across Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh, J&K Bank today organised a Mega Awareness Camp on Financial Inclusion and Social Security Schemes at village Hakal in Satwari Jammu.

MD & CEO Amitava Chatterjee presided over the function while Regional Director (RBI – Jammu) Chandrashekhar Azad was the Chief Guest on the occasion. General Manager & Divisional Head (Jammu) Ashok Gupta, RBI DGM Vibha Gupta and Zonal Head (Jammu) Anita Nehru along with other functionaries of RBI and the Bank were also present on the occasion.

Speaking on the occasion, MD & CEO Amitava Chatterjee said, “At J&K Bank, we believe financial inclusion is not just about opening bank accounts, it is about empowering people and enabling communities to participate fully in the growth story of our nation. We are fully committed to contributing towards the national vision of inclusive growth, and through initiatives like this Mega Camp, we aim to deepen our outreach in unbanked and underbanked areas with financial literacy and access to formal financial channels.”

“Further, in a region as diverse and dynamic as Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh, our role goes beyond being a financial institution – we are partners in progress, aiming to ensure that every individual, from the remotest village to the bustling towns, has the opportunity to build a secure and prosperous future through formal banking channels. By actively extending the reach of government’s social security schemes to the last mile, we are further strengthening this inclusive mission and safeguarding the financial well-being of the most vulnerable sections of society”, he added.

In his address, RBI Regional Director Chandrashekhar Azad appreciated the Bank’s efforts in reaching out to the grassroots level with financial literacy programs and customised banking solutions. However, he exhorted the Bank, as the premier financial institution of the region with extensive network of branches and BCs, to further intensify its outreach and extend its coverage to the unreached.

On the occasion, he impressed upon importance of social security schemes and other financial inclusion schemes for rural population. He stressed the need for timely completion of Re-KYC to ensure uninterrupted banking services and also cautioned the public to remain vigilant against digital frauds.

Earlier, in his welcome address, Divisional Head (Jammu) Ashok Gupta said, “Financial inclusion lies at the core of our mission to empower people. Through such camps, we not only extend banking services to underserved sections but also build trust and awareness among people, ensuring that the benefits of formal finance reach every household.”

 

Greater Kashmir

Jitendra Singh visits cloudburst-hit Kathua, says rehabilitation may cost Rs 150 crore

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Jitendra Singh visits cloudburst-hit Kathua, says rehabilitation may cost Rs 150 crore

Jammu, Aug 22: Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Friday visited areas ravaged by cloudburst and landslide in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kathua district and said that the initial loss has been estimated at about Rs 25 crore, while the long-term permanent rehabilitation may require over Rs 100 to 150 crore.

The Union minister called on civil society to help the administration in curbing illegal encroachments in flood-prone areas.

Singh also assured both financial and material assistance to the affected families. “The initial loss has been estimated at about Rs 25 crore, and the Centre is ready to provide any assistance required by the Union territory administration to deal with the disaster,” he told reporters in Kathua.

He further said that the estimate for long-term rehabilitation could go well beyond Rs 100–150 crore. Singh added that houses damaged in the calamity would be rebuilt, and land would be provided to those whose homes were washed away in the flash floods.

Seven members of four families, including five children, were killed and 15 were injured in two separate incidents of cloudburst and landslide in Jodh Ghati village of Rajbagh and Bagra village of Janglote on August 18.

On the occasion, he distributed relief material among the victims.

“Relief camps have been set up in Gati and other places, which are being taken care of by the administration. The Chief Minister has personally reviewed the situation, and a review meeting has also been held where a rough estimate was formulated,” he added.

Singh, who visited Ghatti, Janglote, Bhed Blode and Dhol Khad areas, met the affected families and enquired about their well-being. He assured them of all possible help in this difficult time.

Singh, while visiting these areas, directed officials to immediately provide water tankers, solar lights, and medical ambulances to inaccessible areas. He also instructed officials to take measures to prevent the outbreak of any epidemic. He also distributed ration kits from his personal resources.

Singh, who is an MP from Udhampur, announced that a regional centre of the India Meteorological Department (IMD) would be set up in Jammu, serving the region only. He also informed that a National Mission has been launched to study Himalayan ecosystem sustainability.

He also stressed the need to fix accountability for poorly built bridges, stating that contractors and engineers must answer for the quality of material used and flaws in design.

Greater Kashmir

CRPF hosts inter-battalion badminton tournament in Srinagar

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CRPF hosts inter-battalion badminton tournament in Srinagar

Srinagar, Aug 22: The 117 Battalion of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), in collaboration with the J&K Sports Council, organised an inter-battalion badminton tournament for the Srinagar Sector from Aug. 18 to 20 at the Sher-e-Kashmir Indoor Sports Complex, bringing together 25 participating battalions and institutions.

As per a statement issued, Biplab Sarkar, Commandant of 117 Bn CRPF, inaugurated the tournament in a colorful ceremony in the presence of officers/men of 117 Bn, CRPF, as well as officials of the J&K Sports Council.

The main objective of the tournament was to hunt for talents and also to encourage sportsmen of different CRPF units/offices under Srinagar Sector. Besides the above, giving them a break from stressful deployment and improving CRPF-public relations were also objectives of the tournament.

The tournament successfully concluded with a colourful closing ceremony where P. R. Jambholkar, DIGP O/O Srinagar Sector, graced the occasion in the presence of officers/men of different CRPF units and officials of the J&K Sports Council as well as local civilian dignitaries. The Chief Guest had praised the J&K Sports Council for providing all assistance with coaches/referees as well as ground support, resulting in the successful completion of the event. He boosted the morale of all soldiers & civilians and suggested everyone participate in different sports.

Greater Kashmir

12,000 GP Fund claims stuck in Kashmir treasuries; employees in crisis

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12,000 GP Fund claims stuck in Kashmir treasuries; employees in crisis

Srinagar, Aug 22: Thousands of government employees across Kashmir are facing an unprecedented delay in accessing their General Provident (GP) Fund savings, as over 12,000 withdrawal claims remain pending with the Department of Treasuries.

The delay, as officially acknowledged in a Right to Information (RTI) reply, is primarily due to the non-availability of funds at the treasury level, leaving employees stranded during times of personal and financial crisis.

The RTI reply received by this correspondent from the Public Information Officer (PIO) of the Department of Treasuries reveals that a total of 12,062 GP Fund withdrawal claims are currently pending across J&K.

Of these, 7359 have been awaiting clearance for over three months, with many cases held up despite administrative approvals being in place.

The reply states that most of these are stuck due to “non-availability of funds at treasuries,” confirming long-standing concerns among employees that the problem is no longer procedural, but financial.

Employees, many of whom have contributed to the GP Fund for decades, say the delay has disrupted crucial life events.

A teacher posted in Budgam said he applied for GP Fund withdrawal four months ago for his daughter’s marriage in October.

“They deducted my salary for 25 years, and now, when I need my money, I am told the treasury has no funds. I don’t understand how a government can hold back our savings,” the teacher said.

An employee of the Health Department, Zahida said her Rs 1.8 lakh claim, submitted in April for her mother’s cancer treatment, was still pending.

“We waited for weeks before realising nothing was moving. I had to borrow money from relatives. It’s traumatic because we don’t even know when, or if, the money will be released,” she said.

The GP Fund is a compulsory long-term savings mechanism for government employees, meant to support them during retirement or urgent financial needs like education, health emergencies, and marriages.

However, the growing number of pending claims has raised concerns about the fiscal health and planning within the Finance Department.

A senior treasury official, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed the severity of the issue.

“We receive funds in instalments from the Finance Department, which are insufficient to meet the rising number of claims. Only emergency cases are being prioritised now,” he said.

Employee associations have expressed outrage over the delays, calling them unjust and exploitative.

Despite assurances of “efforts underway” to clear the backlog, many employees remain sceptical, fearing further delay.

Greater Kashmir

Centre clears names of 14 top IAS officers for key posts in jumbo rejig

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Centre clears names of 14 top IAS officers for key posts in jumbo rejig

New Delhi, Aug 22: The Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC) on Friday approved a major top-level bureaucratic reshuffle of as many as 14 Secretary-rank IAS officers across various ministries and departments of the Centre.

The appointments, which include several officers on special duty (OSD) who are taking charge of posts to replace incumbent officers who are retiring, will see new faces in top positions of the Central government.

As part of the reshuffle, Atish Chandra, an IAS officer of the 1994 batch of the Bihar cadre, has been elevated to the rank of Special Secretary in the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO).

Senior bureaucrat Rajit Punhani has been appointed the Chief Executive Officer of the Food Safety & Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) and will replace Ganji Kamala V. Rao, a 1990 batch officer of the MP cadre, who is superannuating. Punhani, a 1991 batch officer of Bihar cadre, is currently the Skill Development and Entrepreneurship Secretary.

Alka Upadhyaya, a 1990 batch officer of the MP cadre, who is currently the Secretary of the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying, has been shifted to a new role as Secretary of the National Commission for Minorities, under the Ministry of Minority Affairs.

Debashree Mukherjee, a 1991 batch officer of the AGMUT cadre, will take over as the new Secretary for the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship to fill the post that has fallen vacant with Punhani’s transfer. She was previously the Secretary of the Department of Water Resources, River Development, and Ganga Rejuvenation.

Vijay Kumar, a 1992 batch officer of the AGMUT cadre and the current Chairman of the Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI), has been appointed as Officer on Special Duty (OSD) in the Ministry of Ports, Shipping, and Waterways. He will succeed T.K. Ramachandran, a 1991 batch officer of the Tamil Nadu cadre, when he retires on September 30.

V.L. Kantha Rao, a 1992 batch officer of the Madhya Pradesh cadre, has been laterally shifted from the Ministry of Mines to the Department of Water Resources, River Development, and Ganga Rejuvenation, taking over charge from Mukherjee.

Sukriti Likhi, a 1993 batch Haryana cadre officer and Chairperson of the National Authority for Chemical Weapons Convention, is the new OSD in the Department of Ex-Servicemen Welfare, Ministry of Defence. She will succeed Niten Chandra, a 1990 batch Odisha cadre officer, who superannuates on October 31.

Rannjana Chopra, a 1994 batch Odisha cadre officer, has been appointed as OSD in the Ministry of Tribal Affairs. She will take over from Vibhu Nayar, a 1990 batch Tamil Nadu cadre officer, on October 31.

Naresh Pal Gangwar, a 1994 batch Rajasthan cadre officer, has been named Secretary of the Department of Animal Husbandry & Dairying, replacing Upadhyaya.

Niraj Verma, a 1994 batch officer, will be the new OSD in the Department of Justice, succeeding Raj Kumar Goyal, a 1990 batch AGMUT cadre officer, upon his retirement on August 31.

Piyush Goyal, of the 1994 batch, has been appointed Secretary of the Ministry of Mines, replacing Kantha Rao.

Sanjay Garg, a 1994 batch Kerala officer, is the new OSD for the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) and will take over from Pramod Kumar Tiwari, a 1991 batch Assam-Meghalaya cadre officer, on October 31.

Roli Singh, a 1994 batch Rajasthan officer, has been named Chairperson of the National Authority for Chemical Weapons Convention, replacing Likhi.

Trishaljit Sethi, a 1990 batch Indian Postal Service officer, has been appointed as Secretary of the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC).

Greater Kashmir

ED attaches Rs 66.77 Cr properties in PMLA probe

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ED attaches Rs 66.77 Cr properties in PMLA probe

Jammu, Aug 22: The Directorate of Enforcement (ED), Jammu sub-zonal office, has provisionally attached several immovable properties worth approximately Rs 66.77 Cr in the case of Messrs Bharat Papers Limited under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002.

According to the ED spokesperson, the provisionally attached properties comprised factory land and buildings of Messrs Bharat Papers Limited and two residential houses of directors and relatives of directors of Messrs Bharat Papers Limited.

ED initiated an investigation on the basis of an FIR registered by CBI, ACB, Jammu, against Messrs Bharat Papers Limited and its directors, namely Anil Kumar, Parveen Kumar, Baljinder Kumar, and Rajinder Kumar, sons of the late Jagdish Chander, for defrauding a consortium of banks led by the State Bank of India to the tune of Rs 200 Cr on the basis of a complaint filed by the then DGM, Stressed Asset Management Branch, State Bank of India, Ludhiana, Punjab.

The ED investigation revealed that Messrs Bharat Papers Limited and its directors did not use the loan amount for the intended purpose for which the loan was sanctioned.

However, the funds were diverted through bogus or shell entities and bank accounts opened outside the consortium of banks. Further, the loan funds were also syphoned off by way of cash withdrawals directly from the loan accounts.

“Machine parts from the factory unit of Messrs Bharat Papers Limited were also stealthily removed and sold without the knowledge of the banks. Further investigation is in progress,” the spokesperson said.

Meanwhile, in a separate case, ED and the Anti-Corruption Bureau conducted multiple searches in the Jammu region as part of a money laundering probe linked to the alleged grabbing of custodian land worth crores against some revenue department officials and others.

The case was registered by the ACB (Central) of the Jammu and Kashmir Police (JKP).

As per officials, raids were conducted at nine locations in Jammu and one in Udhampur, including at the residences of a personal assistant to a former minister and several property dealers in Jammu.

 

Greater Kashmir

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