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National Testing Agency Extends Registration Dates For UGC-NET
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National Testing Agency Extends Registration Dates For UGC-NET

The National Testing Agency has extended the deadline for the online submission of application form for the UGC-NET. Interested and eligible candidates who wish to appear in the UGC-NET December 2023 exam for Junior Research Fellowship (JRF) and Assistant Professor can now submit the forms online by October 31, 2023. They can visit the official website to register for the exam by 11:59 pm on that day. 

The UGC-NET exam will be conducted from December 6 to December 22, 2023. 

The deadline to submit the examination fee through credit card/ debit card/ Net Banking/UPI has also been extended to October 31. Students will be allowed to make any correction in the particulars in online application form by November 1-3. 

In an official notification, NTA noted that the deadline has been extended as the agency received various representations from the candidates to extend the last date for submission of online application form for UGC NET December 2023. 

The city of exam centre will be announced in the last week of November 2023. The students will be able to download the admit cards from the NTA website in the first week of December 2023. 
The application fee for the candidates belonging to the general and unreserved category is Rs 1,150. For the students belonging  to the general category from the Economically Weaker Section/ Other Backward Class/ Non-Creamy Layer, the application fee is Rs 650. The SC/ST/Persons with disabilities (PwD) candidates and the students from the third gender are required to pay Rs 325. 

The National Testing Agency conducts the UGC-NET to determine the eligibility of Indian nationals for ‘Assistant Professor’ and ‘Junior Research Fellowship and Assistant Professor’ in Indian universities and colleges. 

The National Testing Agency will conduct UGC – NET December 2023 for ‘Junior Research Fellowship’ and eligibility for ‘Assistant Professor’ in 83 subjects in Computer Based Test (CBT) mode.
Candidates can apply for UGC -NET December 2023 through the ‘Online’ mode as the application form in any other mode will not be accepted.

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US Teenager Who Shot 5-Year-Old In The Neck Gets 50 Years In Prison
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US Teenager Who Shot 5-Year-Old In The Neck Gets 50 Years In Prison

A teenager from Oklahoma has been sentenced as an adult to more than 50 years in prison for shooting a 5-year-old girl in the neck as part of gang initiation. The baby-faced boy named Noah Ney was sentenced on October 23 for all 10 ten charges against him, including firearm possession, shooting with intent to kill, and drug possession, ABC News reported. 

The 4-foot, 9-inch tall boy was arrested last year for a drive-by-shooting that he testified was supposed to be an initiation into a gang. 

He shot a 5-year-old in the neck and shoulder while she was playing inside her home. He wanted to be initiated into the Hoover Crips gang which terrorises the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma. 

“The five-year-old was transported to hospital by EMSA because of the severity of her injuries and a difference of an inch or two in the penetrating gunshot wounds to the child could have resulted in her death.,’ Attorney Morgan Medders said.

The 16-year-old made headlines again when he escaped the Juvenile Detention Center in August. However, he was caught and was taken into custody days later.

Prosecutors said that during his time at the Juvenile detention center, the accused assaulted staff flooded his cell and smeared feces on the walls, the New York Post reported. 

The defence lawyer says that his parents are to be blamed for his behaviour and he was denied treatment. 

His aunt testified that Ney has been neglected his whole life by his parents, who have been in and out of prison. 

The prosecutor maintained that the 16-year-old boy is dangerous and should be out of the streets. 

“I have treatment records in a packet that is thicker than a dictionary that show treatment attempts that he rejected, by escaping or assaulting staff that was there to help him get treatment,” Medders said.

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Opinion: Opinion: India’s Got Talent – Where Are They Headed?
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Opinion: Opinion: India’s Got Talent – Where Are They Headed?

Indians make up the largest migrant population in OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries. Indians are the principal national group when it comes to acquiring rich-country citizenship in 2022 and this has been the trend since 2019 (1.5 lakh), according to OECD’s International Migration Outlook 2023 report released recently.

In 2021, around 1.3 lakh Indians acquired the citizenship of an OECD country. The OECD is a group of 38 countries, mostly high-income and ranked high on the Human Development Index (HDI). India was followed by China and Romania. OECD-members are rich countries that have always attracted migrant populations and students. In 2021, 4 lakh new Indian migrants (excluding students) went to OECD-member countries. In 2020, the figure was 2.2 lakh, possibly due to closed borders during Covid.

Interestingly, the economic prosperity of India and the improving wealth of the Indians after economic liberalisation have coincided with more Indians seeking to migrate abroad. India has seen an upswing in legal economic migration. The outflow from India is not just restricted to English-speaking countries like the US, UK, Canada, and Australia but to Italy, Germany and The Netherlands. Indians migrate to other countries for better opportunities. To the advantage of the host country, they arrive with high skills and contribute to human capital development and technological progress. Indians have helped offset labour shortage by filling roles both in fast-growing and declining sectors of the economy of these developed nations. Overall, Indians abroad play a big role in putting India on the global map.

“Better economic opportunities are the primary reasons for Indians acquiring citizenship to rich OECD countries. Higher wages, improved living standards and career advancement plays a crucial role in this. Several OECD countries have skilled migration programmes that attract Indian professionals with skills in demand,” says Abhash Kumar, Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, Atma Ram Sanatan Dharma College, Delhi University.

“Indian diaspora in OECD countries helps promote trade and investment ties between India and these countries. The diaspora facilitates business relationships and cross-border investments,” adds Mr Kumar.

A large migrant population means a huge cash inflow for India due to the remittances from overseas Indians and the money they park in Indian banks as NRI deposits. Both these factors help the country’s external balance. Remittances from abroad obviously have a large impact on the individual families and increase their purchasing capacity. In 2022, the inflow was $111 billion, about 3.3 percent of GDP.

According to the World Bank, almost 36 per cent of the country’s remittance inflows are sourced from high-skilled migrants in the US, UK and Singapore. Skilled Indian migrants in The Netherlands fill some of the critical vacancies in the IT sector. More than two lakh Indian migrants are working in the agricultural and dairy sectors in Italy. India and Italy are close to finalising a migration and mobility partnership deal. The agreement aims to ensure transparent and ‘clean’ migration to curb the exploitation of migrants by touts and agents. Portugal, Germany and Austria have already signed agreements on migration and mobility with India.

However, there is a flipside. Large-scale migration also implies India is still miles behind other developed countries in providing quality education, employment and ease of living. Indians continue to go abroad not only for greener pastures – better employment and money, work-life balance – but also because our education system is below par and so is the job market. It is not just high net worth Indians who have left the country; educated unemployed who couldn’t get jobs here have also jumped ship. Millions of young talented Indians from various disciplines have left in search of better opportunities.

“India ranks low on happiness and peace (136), Human development index-131; Indian passport ranked 87th on the passport index released by Henley Passport Index. India still has partial capital account convertibility. The major reasons for leaving Indian citizenship are financial constraints, education of children, lack of social security benefits, tax legislations, healthcare, standard of living and ease of travelling,” says Sujata Pandey, former director, Atharva Institute of Management, Mumbai.

As India’s young, skilled labour force leaves home in search of better rewards for their effort and talent, it also means a lost opportunity for the country to grow faster. The loss of the fiscal contributions of these highly skilled individuals is a big loss for the country.

“Migration as well as Indians acquiring foreign citizenship deprives India of a huge tax revenue as the diaspora do not pay taxes for their earnings. It results in double drain for India. Firstly, the nation loses its hard acquired talent and skills- both technical and professional. When millionaires acquire foreign citizenship, the nation is deprived of the benefits of the huge investment of scarce resources made on education of these individuals by India,” says TR Chandrashekhara, development economist.

Millennials raised with a western outlook in privileged schools find it easier to insert themselves in developed western countries than suffer the ignominy of the rat race and struggle in India. Their parents have the financial means to facilitate their life-altering decision.

The gaps that compel people to leave the country must be plugged. Ensuring better quality of life, job opportunities, social structure, financial and social security, development, gender equality, freedom in all walks of life are some ways the government can stop its human capital from becoming an asset to other countries.

India’s rapidly growing economy and burgeoning pool of young talent are the envy of many nations. While Indian migrants continue to be our goodwill ambassador, the brain-drain challenge casts a shadow over India’s growth prospects, especially when it aims to be a developed country by 2047.

(Bharti Mishra Nath is a senior journalist).

Disclaimer: These are the personal opinions of the author.

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