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(rate this)
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You all should have gone through the news recently where a guy hid in a toilet of an airplane to reach India....well you all might have thought that it was illegal and all, but listen to his story and then decide what he did whether it was right or wrong...This is an article from TOI, and after reading it I really felt for Indians who are working in Arab countries... Habib Hussain of Moradabad, who hid in a toilet on an Air India flight from Saudi Arabia to return to his own country, says he did so for his two children, his pregnant wife, and an ailing mother. After his bizarre experience, Habib says he has realised that `aadhi roti' (half a piece of bread) at home is better than one in an ...
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Sunil Thacker
| Commented
| 1 year ago
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veryyy unfortunate but true. Frankly, there's a urgent need for 'control on agents/agencies' within India. These workers are charged a high sum in India for return for a job (which in fact is violative of laws of the UAE).
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Sunil Thacker
| Commented
| 1 year ago
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veryyy unfortunate but true. Frankly, there's a urgent need for 'control on agents/agencies' within India. These workers are charged a high sum in India for return for a job (which in fact is violative of laws of the UAE).
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Anu Chaithanya
| Commented
| 2 years ago
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This is a pathetic issue for every indian who is dreaming some thing before leaving to saudi. The main problem is most of the people are not enquiring what is the correct job they have to do there, where & what is the job? Coming to agents, most...
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Insight: "Indian workers are being sold like cattle.... " deleted from your view.
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(rate this)
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You all should have gone through the news recently where a guy hid in a toilet of an airplane to reach India....well you all might have thought that it was illegal and all, but listen to his story and then decide what he did whether it was right or wrong...This is an article from TOI, and after reading it I really felt for Indians who are working in Arab countries... Habib Hussain of Moradabad, who hid in a toilet on an Air India flight from Saudi Arabia to return to his own country, says he did so for his two children, his pregnant wife, and an ailing mother. After his bizarre experience, Habib says he has realised that `aadhi roti' (half a piece of bread) at home is better than one in an ...
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Sunil Thacker
| Commented
| 1 year ago
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veryyy unfortunate but true. Frankly, there's a urgent need for 'control on agents/agencies' within India. These workers are charged a high sum in India for return for a job (which in fact is violative of laws of the UAE).
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Sunil Thacker
| Commented
| 1 year ago
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veryyy unfortunate but true. Frankly, there's a urgent need for 'control on agents/agencies' within India. These workers are charged a high sum in India for return for a job (which in fact is violative of laws of the UAE).
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Anu Chaithanya
| Commented
| 2 years ago
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This is a pathetic issue for every indian who is dreaming some thing before leaving to saudi. The main problem is most of the people are not enquiring what is the correct job they have to do there, where & what is the job? Coming to agents, most...
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Insight: "Indian workers are being sold like cattle.... " deleted from your view.
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(rate this)
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It's disaster in the desert. Late last week, Dubai World quasi-defaulted — and took the Emirate's credibility with it. Will Dubai meet its obligations? It's the question the bean counters of the universe are nervously asking. As usual, it's the wrong question. Dubai was a mini-America: finance and real estate made up the lion's share of its economy. Today, both are discovering the consequence is unsustainable, brittle, meaningless growth; growth that is bubble-driven, prone to crash, in many ways illusory, and that fails to create an authentically shared prosperity. Dubai's real problem wasn't debt itself: it was that dumb growth required debt, and misallocated that debt to its least produc...
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Sunil Thacker
| Commented
| 1 year ago
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Personally, I do not think Dubai defaulted. Check out this link http://www.financierworldwide.com/article.php?id=6554
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Fazalur Rahman
| Commented
| 2 years ago
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Dubai Governments thoughts and approach was fine but not regulated properly, too much bias of the government and hasty approach of the business people that created the current scenario. No one to be blamed except the government regulations.
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Insight: "Why Dubai Defaulted -What America should learn from it?" deleted from your view.
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(rate this)
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Yes
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9
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VS |
8
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No
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Sunil Thacker
| Argues in support of
"Yes"
| 1 year ago
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Yes, the exposure of Indian banks (comparatively) is much lower. The Indian economy has outperformed other countries.Â
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RAMANATHA PRABHU N
| Argues in support of
"No"
| 2 years ago
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The global crisis of 2008 triggered the Dubai World, holding company of several subsidiaries and it never recovered from the blow, that is its position. The full impact is yet to be assessed, but estimated that Indian banks had investments there...
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Mathew Cherian
| Argues in support of
"No"
| 2 years ago
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I think the crash may not cause big panic since measures are in place in different countries to meet the situation everyone is facing now. Since this crash is little way into the big crash in US and elsehwere, there might be adequate reqourse...
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Debate: "Will Indian market cope up with Dubai crash?" deleted from your view.
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(rate this)
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Yes
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30
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113
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No
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Raunak Jain
| Argues in support of
"Yes"
| 1 year ago
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ok,jst ask urself if ur caught by a trafic police 4 xyz reason nd they ask u to pay a fine if 200 or pay 50 bucks nd go happily wat will u choose tats curroption
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Sunil Thacker
| Argues in support of
| 1 year ago
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Simply no - as far as you and me are concerned. But, we (individuals, citizens, non-residents and government) need to do more so that this question is ruled out now and forever.Â
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Azhar Kazmi
| Argues in support of
"No"
| 2 years ago
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To say that corruption is in the blood of every Indian is a bit too cynical. There are umpteen Indians or people of any nationality who are not corrupt. And there might be many more uncorrupted people in India and the world whom circumstances...
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Debate: "Is corruption in the blood of every Indian?" deleted from your view.
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(rate this)
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Yes
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16
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VS |
13
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No
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Sunil Thacker
| Argues in support of
"Yes"
| 1 year ago
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Indian IT regulations have undergone significant changes. From cyber security to internet censorship , from hacking to cyber forensics, the challenges are diverse and immense. The Indian judiciary has reviewed the law(s) with a careful, rational...
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Pradeep Thomas Abraham
| Argues in support of
"No"
| 2 years ago
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I don't know if any of the people who have said Yes have read the Information Technology Act, 2000. , and the amendments.It is a very very scary law - so the law does not need to be any more stringent.Possibly the way it is interpreted and...
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Alexander Lewis
| Argues in support of
"No"
| 2 years ago
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India is poorly lacking in not just cyber laws, but also patent protection, pharma products, shoddy packaging and shadow marketing done riding  piggy back by small firms on International or MNC products. India still does get software business...
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Debate: "Is the Indian judiciary aware of the fact that the country needs more stringent Cyber laws? " deleted from your view.
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(rate this)
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1
LEGAL ENVIRONMENT SHAPES THE MARKET AND NOT VICE VERSA:
2
Staying in Business
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bharat
| Supported idea
"LEGAL ENVIRONMENT SHAPES THE MARKET AND NOT VICE VERSA:"
| 1 year ago
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yes taht is write many politition are lawyer but after joint politic they forget law and india
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Sunil Thacker
| Added idea
"."
| 1 year ago
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Personally, I think Indian law firms are far off from the 'market turbulence' compared to several other jurisdictions such as Germany, Spain and many others. In the Indian context, firms may however need to refine and/or demonstrate client...
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Ideate: "How law firms can survive the market turbulence??" deleted from your view.
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(rate this)
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Yes
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3
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3
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No, new formulations are required.
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Peeyush Chauhan
| Argues in support of
"Yes"
| 1 year ago
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Agrred with Mr. Sunil. No law is complete in its strict sense unless executed. Indian laws are quite exhuastive, amedndments take place as required.
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Sunil Thacker
| Argues in support of
| 1 year ago
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"application of law" and law are two different things. Application of law includes several factors including control over red tapism. There are several jurisdictions in the World where number of laws and regulations are almost one-third of what India...
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Ramachandra
| Argues in support of
"No, new formulations are required."
| 2 years ago
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I think some laws which are enacted are very old, it is required to amend some laws keeping in mind the current changes in the society. To make Indian Law more powerful, implement it in right and strict way.
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Debate: "Whether Indian Laws are powerfull and Sufficient one ?" deleted from your view.




