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BMC grants special Covid allowance to 19,400 BEST employees in Mumbai

BMC grants special Covid allowance to 19,400 BEST employees in Mumbai

Time of India7 hours ago
Mumbai: BMC on Thursday announced a Covid allowance totalling Rs 52 crore for 19,400 employees of BEST and deposited the money in their bank accounts.
Shramik Utkarsh Sabha President and MLA Prasad Lad said the official letter was handed over by BMC Commissioner Bhushan Gagrani to BEST General Manager Ashish Sharma.
He added that amounts ranging from Rs 10,000 to Rs 22,000 were credited to the accounts of 19,400 BEST employees as a special Covid allowance.
"This has brought cheer to BEST staffers on the eve of Independence Day," Lad said. "Similarly, they will celebrate Diwali as the state govt is positive about ensuring that BEST employees get their rightful housing in Mumbai. Chief minister Devendra Fadnavis has approved this demand, and a decision in this regard will be taken soon."
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Engines of Independence: Why the heart of India's fighter jets must beat at home
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Speaking to us ahead of Independence Day, Behramkamdin puts the challenge into perspective:'If you have a beautiful car without an engine, it's just a showpiece. The same applies to aerospace. We've done well in avionics, actuation systems, and other aircraft subsystems, but without our own engine, we're only halfway there.'The point is clear: without mastery over propulsion, India's aerospace sovereignty is aerospace journey began with rocket launches. In 1985, it started with precision tooling for ISRO. From there came the Vikas engine, the cryogenic stages that carried Chandrayaan and Mangalyaan, and a partnership so deep that Behramkamdin says: 'Any rocket launched from Sriharikota with an ISRO logo will have at least one component, if not an entire module or engine, made at our Vikhroli plant.'Under Dr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam's mentorship, Godrej entered defence propulsion for missiles before taking on aviation. Today, almost half its aerospace business serves the skies, including all eight modules for DRDO's 50 kN Kaveri derivative quest for a home-grown fighter jet engine began in the 1980s with the Gas Turbine Research Establishment's (GTRE) Kaveri programme. Conceived alongside the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) Tejas, the Kaveri was intended to free India from reliance on foreign was an audacious leap and one fraught with challenges. Unlike airframes, engines demand mastery of exotic alloys, high-temperature materials, and microscopic tolerances. Very few nations, the US, Russia, France, and the UK among them, had Kaveri engine's initial prototypes delivered around 70–78 kN of thrust with afterburner, short of the 90 kN target needed for the Tejas. Technical hurdles, from turbine blade metallurgy to afterburner stability, combined with funding interruptions and shifting priorities, led to its eventual decoupling from the LCA to write it off as a failure would be to miss the point. The Kaveri built an ecosystem: design teams, test facilities, metallurgy expertise, and private-sector engagement. Godrej, for instance, manufactured eight major Kaveri modules and delivered two complete engines to GTRE. These capabilities remain the bedrock of India's next propulsion push.'The Kaveri gave us the know-how. Now we need the national will to take it forward, first to 90 kN, then to 120 kN for AMCA,' says Behramkamdin. The Kaveri was not the last word. It was the first sentence in a story India has not finished are bursts of glory, one ignition, one ascent, one job done. Fighter jet engines are the opposite: decades of relentless service, igniting thousands of times, enduring dust, salt, monsoon moisture, Himalayan chill, and desert heat. They demand rare alloys, faultless tolerances, and endurance trials that last longer than some aircraft has already indigenised most missile materials. Rare earth extraction in Odisha is progressing. Composites remain a bottleneck. 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