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CM Dhami orders crackdown on illegally obtained IDs in Uttarakhand; over 9,000 ration cards cancelled
CM Dhami orders crackdown on illegally obtained IDs in Uttarakhand; over 9,000 ration cards cancelled

Time of India

time6 days ago

  • Politics
  • Time of India

CM Dhami orders crackdown on illegally obtained IDs in Uttarakhand; over 9,000 ration cards cancelled

CM Dhami orders crackdown on illegally obtained IDs in Uttarakhand; over 9,000 ration cards cancelled DEHRADUN: Uttarakhand chief minister Pushkar Singh Dhami on Monday sent clear instructions to all District Magistrates against all those who have obtained ration cards, Aadhaar cards, voter cards, Ayushman cards and other documents in the state in an illegal manner, and against individuals involved in making such cards, a release said. Acting on directions, district magistrates have cancelled ineligible ration cards. So far, a total of 961 ineligible cards have been cancelled in the Pauri district, and 5307 ration cards have been cancelled in the Bageshwar district. 3,332 cards have been cancelled in Dehradun. CM Dhami further stated that the identification of ration card holders was necessary in order to identify people eligible for the benefits of the ration scheme. On the instructions of the chief minister, the verification campaign of Ration Card, Aadhar Card, Voter Card and Ayushman Card is being conducted intensively at the district level by all the District Magistrates. Earlier in the day, the CM held a virtual meeting with the DMs to discuss the progress of development works and preparations to deal with any eventuality, given the alert issued by the India Meteorological Department (IMD). The IMD has issued an orange alert for three days in the districts of Dehradun, Nainital, Champawat, Bageshwar, Pauri Garhwal, and Udham Singh Nagar. In view of the alert issued by the IMD, the Dehradun district administration announced the closure of all schools up to Class 12 and Anganwadi centres on August 4, 2025. According to an alert issued by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) and the National Disaster Alert Portal, Dehradun district is likely to experience intense rainfall activity from the evening or night of August 3. The forecast warns of heavy to very heavy rainfall at isolated places, accompanied by thunderstorms, lightning and gusty winds.

RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025 to be released today at rrb.digialm.com; here's how to download
RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025 to be released today at rrb.digialm.com; here's how to download

Time of India

time04-08-2025

  • General
  • Time of India

RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025 to be released today at rrb.digialm.com; here's how to download

RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025 released at download now RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025: The Railway Recruitment Boards (RRBs) will release the RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025 today on the official website – Candidates registered for the NTPC Undergraduate (UG) Computer-Based Test (CBT 1) will be able to download their hall tickets using their login credentials. The RRB NTPC UG CBT 1 examination is being conducted to recruit candidates for Undergraduate posts under Centralised Employment Notification (CEN) 05/2024. According to the schedule, the exam will be held from August 7 to September 8, 2025. Candidates are required to carry the admit card along with a valid photo identification document to the examination centre. RRB NTPC UG exam to be conducted in pen and paper mode The CBT 1 examination for NTPC UG positions will be held in pen and paper mode. The exam city intimation slips were released on July 29, 2025. Admit cards will be made available four days before the respective exam dates. There will be three shifts per day: Shift 1 (9 AM to 10 AM), Shift 2 (12:45 PM to 2:15 PM), and Shift 3 (4:30 PM to 6 PM). A printed copy of the admit card and a valid photo ID such as a Voter Card, Aadhaar Card, E-Aadhaar printout, Driving Licence, PAN Card, E-PAN Card printout, or Passport is mandatory for entry. Hard copies of the admit card will also be sent by post to candidates. How to download RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025 Candidates can follow the steps below to download their RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025 from the official website: Step 1: Visit the official RRB region-wise website or go directly to Step 2: Click on the link titled 'CEN 05/2024 (NTPC-UG): CBT-1 City-Intimation & E-Call Letter' available on the homepage. Step 3: Select 'Click to download city intimation slip and e-call letter for the 1st stage Computer-Based Test (CBT 1)'. Step 4: Enter your User ID (Registration Number), Password (Date of Birth), and Captcha Code to log in. Step 5: View and download the admit card. Click the print option to obtain a hard copy. For further details, candidates are advised to check the official RRB website and stay updated with announcements. Direct link to download RRB NTPC UG admit card 2025 | Link 2 Recruitment process and eligibility details The RRB NTPC UG recruitment process aims to fill Undergraduate positions through the CBT 1 examination. Applicants were required to have completed their Class 12 or equivalent qualification from a recognised board to be eligible. Successful candidates in the CBT 1 will proceed to the next stage of the recruitment process. Further selection will depend on merit, document verification, and medical fitness. TOI Education is on WhatsApp now. Follow us here . Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!

Yogendra Yadav writes: On ground in Bihar, Election Commission of India writes a dystopian fiction
Yogendra Yadav writes: On ground in Bihar, Election Commission of India writes a dystopian fiction

Indian Express

time24-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

Yogendra Yadav writes: On ground in Bihar, Election Commission of India writes a dystopian fiction

We were in Patna when the news channels started reporting on the Election Commission of India's (ECI) counter-affidavit on the Special Intensive Revision (SIR). We had just finished a day-long jansunwai, a public hearing organised by peoples' organisations, on the ground experience of the SIR in Bihar. About 250 ordinary people from 19 districts across Bihar, mostly villagers and a majority of them women, had come to Patna to share their stories. Some had travelled through the night in trains packed with kanwariyas and job aspirants coming to the state capital for a major exam. Exhausted, a few snoozed off and on, squatting uncomfortably on chairs. About three dozen of them got to tell their stories to a distinguished panel comprising Justice (Retd) Anjana Prakash, Wajahat Habibullah, Jean Drèze, Nandini Sundar, D M Diwakar and Bhanwar Meghwanshi. We read news reports about the affidavit late in the evening. And we recalled what we had heard through the day in the multiple languages of Bihar. The first-hand accounts we heard that day and in the preceding weeks had no resemblance to the official account. These two were clearly about two different worlds. The official account attributed to the ECI could well have been a piece of creative writing, a fiction about an imagined land, if only it were written better. On the ground, it has been a month of dystopia. Phulkumari Devi, a farm labourer from Hasanganj in Katihar, was asked for her photo, a copy of her Voter Card and her Aadhaar Card. (For context: the ECI had dispensed with the requirement of a photograph; EPIC was unnecessary as it was pre-printed on her form; Aadhaar number was 'optional' and the card inadmissible as per the ECI.) She had to sell the rice obtained from the ration shop, the only thing she had, to get photocopies and a photograph from the nearby town. She went hungry and lost two days of wages. Sumitra Devi, around 60 years old, came from Saharsa. She was told she needed to submit papers for her parents, who died long ago, and give caste or domicile certificates for herself, or else she would cease to be 'sarkar ke log'. She has spent Rs 300 to apply for a caste certificate, which she awaits. Gobind Paswan, again from Saharsa, was asked to give a copy of his passbook and land records. (Context: both were on the voters' list in 2003 and were not required to give any documents.) We heard many stories of touts (the husband of an anganwadi worker who was a BLO, for example) who charged poor people Rs 100 for filling in the form. Woman after woman spoke of how difficult and in many cases impossible it was to arrange documents from their mayaka (which was in Nepal in many cases) on the status of their parents in the 2003 electoral rolls. In this context, the idea that migrant workers would 'fill the enumeration form in online mode using their mobile phones through the ECINet App' is a joke. The findings of a rapid survey of migrant workers by Stranded Workers Action Network were reported in the jansunwai. Of the 235 migrant workers staying outside Bihar who were surveyed over the phone, one-third had not heard of the SIR. Among those who had heard, almost three in four had no idea of the required documents. Only one-tenth had heard about the official announcement of online submission. Let's compare just one sentence of official fiction with ground reality. Here is Guideline 3(b) of the SIR order, which the ECI claims to have followed faithfully: 'BLOs shall visit each household and distribute Enumeration Form, with pre-printed details of existing electors, to each existing elector in duplicate and will guide them in filling up the form.' This simple instruction contains six tasks. And it exposes six lies of the ECI. One, the BLOs were supposed to visit each household within their booth. They did not. Given the impossible deadlines, they could not. After trying for the first few days, they were instructed not to 'waste their time' in going from house to house. In nearly half the cases, we heard about voters chasing the BLO and not the other way round. Two, the distribution was to be done by the BLOs. In many urban areas, this was done by municipal employees with no official credentials. Three, they were supposed to give a unique form to each voter with pre-printed details. In many urban areas, including Patna, residents were given a blank form with no personal details. Four, the forms were to be given to each person on the existing voters' list. We heard numerous cases where not every member got the form. Five, the forms were to be given in duplicate, one copy to be given to the BLO and the other to be retained by the voter with a proof of receipt. This simply did not happen, unless an exceptionally persistent voter took a photocopy of her own form and forced the BLO to give an acknowledgement. Mostly, people were given only one form, with no proof of having submitted it to the BLO. Six, the BLO was to assist and guide people in filling in the forms. This was an impossible ask of the poor BLO, often ill-informed and already beleaguered. The best they could do was not misguide the voters. Senior journalist Ajit Anjum has released a number of video reports exposing on camera the SIR's biggest fraud: Enumeration forms being filled in without the voter's consent or even knowledge. We came across a multitude of cases of voters reporting this gross violation of the process. Either family members signed for a person out of station, or people were informed by the BLO that their forms had been submitted, without their having seen or signed them. In several cases, the voters discovered on the ECI website that they could not file their form as it had already been submitted. At least a quarter or more of the total forms filled in (the ECI reports a success rate of 98.01 per cent) could belong to this fraudulent category. These are not exceptions or operational lapses that often happen in a large exercise of this nature. The confusion and chaos of the SIR are an inevitable outcome of its design. What else should you expect if you kickstart such a massive exercise with less than 24 hours' notice, if you expect an ill-equipped and over-burdened administrative machine to carry out multiple tasks within four weeks, and if you demand of 8 crore people the documents you know they may not possess? The brazen violation of rules and norms and fake documentation being reported from all over Bihar was built into the SIR. It is pointless to blame the BLOs and the rest of the administrative machinery. They are as much victims as the ordinary people. The blame lies squarely with the ECI. It is not too late for it to acknowledge the reality and cease this experiment on the people. The jansunwai in Patna ended with a unanimous call to annul the SIR. Swami is state coordinator of Bharat Jodo Abhiyaan, Bihar. Shastri and Yadav work with the national team of Bharat Jodo Abhiyaan. Yadav has filed a petition in the Supreme Court challenging the SIR

CISF Head Constable Recruitment 2025: Apply for 403 posts at cisfrectt.cisf.gov.in, details here
CISF Head Constable Recruitment 2025: Apply for 403 posts at cisfrectt.cisf.gov.in, details here

Hindustan Times

time18-05-2025

  • Hindustan Times

CISF Head Constable Recruitment 2025: Apply for 403 posts at cisfrectt.cisf.gov.in, details here

Central Industrial Security Force, CISF has invited applications for Head Constable posts. Eligible candidates can apply online through the official website of CISF at This recruitment drive will fill up 403 posts in the organisation. The registration process begins on May 18 and will close on June 6, 2025. Read below for eligibility, selection process and other details. Candidates who want to apply for the posts should have passed Class 12 from a recognised educational Institution with credit of representing State / National / International in games, Sports and Athletics. The age limit should be between 18 to 23 years as on August 1, 2025. Candidates should not have been born earlier than 02/08/2002 and later than 01/08/2007. The recruitment shall have following two stages: 1st stage: a) Trial Test b) Proficiency Test c) Physical Standard Test (PST) d) Documentation 2. 2nd stage Medical Examination Trail Test: Immediately on reporting of candidates at the Recruitment Centre, the Recruitment Board will verify the identity of candidates from the photograph and signature available in admit card as well as from photo bearing IDENTITY PROOF such as Aadhaar Card, Voter Card, Driving License, PAN Card, Passport, ID Card issued by University/College/School etc. The application fee for UR, OBC and EWS candidates is ₹100/-. Female candidates and those candidates belonging to Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe categories are exempted from paying application fee. The payment should be done through online mode. For more related details candidates can check the official website of CISF.

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