KASKI INMATE ESCAPES
Kathmandu, 26 July: An inmate hailed for rape escaped Friday
From Kaski district prison.
Hem Bahadur Tamang fled while disposing prison garbage outside the jail.
Police have launched a search..
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JHAPA DISPLACED STARVING
Kathmandu, 26 July: People displaced by flood in
Panchgachhi VDC-1 of Jhapa district have to spend their days starving after the
food provided to them by different organizations was finished., rSS reports
from Jhapa.Nepal Red Cross Society had provided eight kg of rice to the displaced people.
Among the flood victims, majority of them have reported that they have to struggle for life due to lack of sufficient food.
Swangi Rajbangshi, a local, said "I have been feeding the children preparing meal by drying the wet and stinking rice that was saved and pulled out of the flood water."
As many as 19 people of different six families are taking shelter in a temple in Sukrabare Bazaar as the flood water in Baniyanikhola (river) swept away their farm and house.
The Nepal Red Cross Society, Jhapa Chambers of Commerce and Industry, and Sahara Nepal, a local non-governmental organization, had offered eight kg rice, two and half kg pulses, and three kg beaten rice for immediate relief. RSS
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JCF EMPLOYEES STILL WAIT FOR SEVERANCE FACILITIES
“Though the Ministry of Finance has allocated funds to pay off the staff, we have yet to decide who should distribute the amount and how,” said Rishi Raj Koirala, head of the Technology Division at the Industry Ministry. He added that they needed another eight to 10 people to distribute the money and provide security at the factory.
“The Finance Ministry has allocated funds under several titles including medicine, remuneration, gratuity and allowance,” added Koirala. “But we do not have any basis to determine how much and under what heading each employee should be paid.”
Koirala said that an official should be authorised to check the accounts of the factory in order to fix the amount of the payment. “We have asked the Finance Ministry to provide an additional Rs 20 million for security arrangements, but it has not responded so far,” he added.
However, Finance Ministry officials said that their job was only to provide the necessary budget, and that the management aspect was the responsibility of the Industry Ministry. “The Cabinet has asked the Industry Ministry to start the payment process by delegating authority to a joint secretary,” said Dhundi Raj Pokharel, chief of the PEs Division at the Finance Ministry.
The government has estimated over Rs 2 billion will be needed to pay off the JCF staff. An official of the Public Enterprises Section at the Industry Ministry said the Finance Ministry had provided Rs 1.36 billion in the first instalment to pay the salaries of the employees. The Finance Ministry will need to arrange Rs 520 million for the second instalment.
Among other benefits, the employees will be given a gratuity equivalent to one month’s salary under the severance package fixed by the government. An Industry Ministry official said that the government had not decided if payment should be made to employees who have retired without receiving retirement benefits. “A sum of Rs 251 million will be required to pay the staffers who have already retired,” he said.
Three months ago, the Public Enterprises Board (PEB) had recommended that JCF be closed and its staff paid off because the troubled state-owned enterprise was deemed to be beyond rescue. JCF ’s liabilities include Rs 500 million in bank loans and Rs 120 million in government taxes.
It owes hefty sums to suppliers of raw materials, including Rs 70 million to suppliers in India. It has to pay Rs 210 million to Rastriya Beema Sansthan in insurance premiums, according to the PEB report. The PEB has valued JCF ’s fixed assets at Rs 10 billion.
Cabinet decided three weeks ago to pay off the employees of
Janakpur Cigarette Factory ( JCF ) and close
it down, but they are yet to see any of the money. Payment has been held up
because the Ministry of Industry hasn’t been able to work out how the severance
pay should be distributed to the factory’s 758 workers.
“Though the Ministry of Finance has allocated funds to pay off the staff, we
have yet to decide who should distribute the amount and how,” said Rishi Raj
Koirala, head of the Technology Division at the Industry Ministry. He added
that they needed another eight to 10 people to distribute the money and provide
security at the factory. “The Finance Ministry has allocated funds under several titles including medicine, remuneration, gratuity and allowance,” added Koirala. “But we do not have any basis to determine how much and under what heading each employee should be paid.”
Koirala said that an official should be authorised to check the accounts of the factory in order to fix the amount of the payment. “We have asked the Finance Ministry to provide an additional Rs 20 million for security arrangements, but it has not responded so far,” he added.
However, Finance Ministry officials said that their job was only to provide the necessary budget, and that the management aspect was the responsibility of the Industry Ministry. “The Cabinet has asked the Industry Ministry to start the payment process by delegating authority to a joint secretary,” said Dhundi Raj Pokharel, chief of the PEs Division at the Finance Ministry.
The government has estimated over Rs 2 billion will be needed to pay off the JCF staff. An official of the Public Enterprises Section at the Industry Ministry said the Finance Ministry had provided Rs 1.36 billion in the first instalment to pay the salaries of the employees. The Finance Ministry will need to arrange Rs 520 million for the second instalment.
Among other benefits, the employees will be given a gratuity equivalent to one month’s salary under the severance package fixed by the government. An Industry Ministry official said that the government had not decided if payment should be made to employees who have retired without receiving retirement benefits. “A sum of Rs 251 million will be required to pay the staffers who have already retired,” he said.
Three months ago, the Public Enterprises Board (PEB) had recommended that JCF be closed and its staff paid off because the troubled state-owned enterprise was deemed to be beyond rescue. JCF ’s liabilities include Rs 500 million in bank loans and Rs 120 million in government taxes.
It owes hefty sums to suppliers of raw materials, including Rs 70 million to suppliers in India. It has to pay Rs 210 million to Rastriya Beema Sansthan in insurance premiums, according to the PEB report. The PEB has valued JCF ’s fixed assets at Rs 10 billion.
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