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ఐపీఎస్ బదిలీలపై హైకోర్టులో తీర్పు వాయిదా - ఈసీఐ
ఐపీఎస్ అధికారుల బదిలీలపై ఈసీ ఆదేశాలను సవాల్ చేస్తూ ప్రభుత్వం వేసిన పిటిషన్పై హైకోర్టులో విచారణ కొనసాగింది. ఈసీ తరఫున వాదనలు వినిపించిన న్యాయవాది... రాష్ట్ర ప్రభుత్వానికి ఈసీ నిర్ణయాన్ని ప్రశ్నించే హక్కు లేదన్నారు. ఈ అంశంపై వైకాపా ఇంప్లీడ్ పిటిషన్ దాఖలు చేసి వాదనలు వినిపించింది.
ఐపీఎస్ బదిలీపై ముగిసిన వాదనలు
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Published : Mar 28, 2019, 9:38 PM IST
ఐపీఎస్ అధికారుల బదిలీలపై హైకోర్టులో వాదనలు కొనసాగాయి. వైకాపా వేసిన ఇంప్లీడ్ పిటిషన్ను న్యాయస్థానం విచారణకు తీసుకుంది.సీనియర్ న్యాయవాది సీవీ మోహన్రెడ్డి వైకాపా తరఫున వాదనలు వినిపించారు. అనంతరం ఈసీ తరఫున న్యాయవాది వాదనలు వినిపించారు. ఎన్నికల సంఘం తీసుకున్న నిర్ణయాన్ని ప్రశ్నించే హక్కు రాష్ట్రానికి లేదన్నారు. ఈసీకి అందిన ఫిర్యాదుల మేరకే చర్యలు తీసుకున్నట్లు స్పష్టం చేశారు. ఇరు వర్గాల వాదనలు విన్న హైకోర్టు తీర్పు వాయిదా వేసింది.
ఇవీ చూడండి
ఐపీఎస్ అధికారుల బదిలీలపై హైకోర్టులో వాదనలు కొనసాగాయి. వైకాపా వేసిన ఇంప్లీడ్ పిటిషన్ను న్యాయస్థానం విచారణకు తీసుకుంది.సీనియర్ న్యాయవాది సీవీ మోహన్రెడ్డి వైకాపా తరఫున వాదనలు వినిపించారు. అనంతరం ఈసీ తరఫున న్యాయవాది వాదనలు వినిపించారు. ఎన్నికల సంఘం తీసుకున్న నిర్ణయాన్ని ప్రశ్నించే హక్కు రాష్ట్రానికి లేదన్నారు. ఈసీకి అందిన ఫిర్యాదుల మేరకే చర్యలు తీసుకున్నట్లు స్పష్టం చేశారు. ఇరు వర్గాల వాదనలు విన్న హైకోర్టు తీర్పు వాయిదా వేసింది.
ఇవీ చూడండి
వైఎస్ వివేకా హత్య కేసు.. మరో ముగ్గురి అరెస్టు!
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kiev - 26 March 2019
1. Various of Independence Square, people walking by
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kiev - 21 March 2019
2. Interview with political analyst Volodymyr Fesenko
3. Traffic on road
4. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Volodymyr Fesenko, Political analyst:
"At the moment I can't say for sure who is likely to win in the upcoming election, and this might be the main thing making this election different from those in Russia or Belarus. (Ukrainian presidential candidate Volodymyr) Zelenskiy has a good chance, but so do (Ukrainian President) Petro Poroshenko and (Ukrainian presidential candidate) Yulia Tymoshenko. These are the three main favourites."
5. Pan-right from a busy road to Fesenko speaking
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Volodymyr Fesenko, Political analyst:
"What can be said with confidence is that there won't be a winner in the first round, and who will win in the second round will depend on the configuration of who passes through and what the turnout will be for each candidate. And with regards to the turnout Zelenskiy has a problem because many of his supporters are young and apolitical people. But if they come and vote his chances for a victory will be pretty big."
PETRO POROSHENKO HANDOUT - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kiev - 17 March 2019
7. Various of Ukrainian presidential candidate and President Petro Poroshenko speaking to supporters during his presidential campaign tour, audience
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kiev - 26 March 2019
8. Various of Petro Poroshenko campaign tent in downtown Kiev, leaflets promoting his programme
9. SOUNDBITE (Ukrainian) Anatoliy Huyman, Petro Poroshenko supporter:
"I've made up my mind about a favourite candidate a long time ago, because you can't change your horses in the middle of a challenging crossing, and neither can you change your commander in the middle of a war."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kiev - 4 February 2019
10. Various of candidate and former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko delivering a speech at a news conference
YULIA TYMOSHENKO HANDOUT - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Uzhgorod, Ukraine - 26 March 2019
11. Various of Tymoshenko meeting supporters during her campaign, speaking on stage
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kiev, Ukraine - 26 March 2019
12. Various of Tymoshenko's campaign tent in downtown Kiev, leaflets
13. SOUNDBITE (Ukrainian) Nelya Molyarchuk, Yulia Tymoshenko supporter:
"I expect her to make all the necessary changes happen for Ukraine, and then everything will be fine."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Kiev, Ukraine - 6 February 2019
14. Various of Zelenskiy during filming for the television series: "The Servant of The People"
VOLODYMYR ZELENSKIY YOUTUBE CHANNEL - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Internet - 7 February 2019
15. Various of Zelenskiy campaign promo clip
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kiev, Ukraine - 26 March 2019
16. Various of a banner with one of Zelenskiy's campaign mottos reading in Ukrainian: "No promises, no accuses"
17. SOUNDBITE (Ukrainian) Dmytro Pashchenko, Volodymyr Zelenskiy's supporter:
"I know Zelenskiy as an honest and conscientious man, I have no doubts about that. He's also a family person, with a family kind of set of mind, which is a good trait worthy of a president."
18. Various views of Independence Square
STORYLINE:
Opinion polls ahead of Ukraine's March 31 presidential vote indicate that no one will come close to the 50-percent support needed to win in the first round.
By their nicknames, the top contenders in the election resemble a colourful operetta cast: The Chocolate King, the Gas Princess, The Servant of the People.
These three appear to have the best chance of making it into the second round three weeks later, each of them bearing vivid qualities.
Petro Poroshenko, the incumbent, came to power in 2014 with the image of a "good oligarch".
The bulk of his fortune came from a seemingly innocuous source - the chocolate-maker Roshen - and he promised to divest himself of the whole business upon becoming president.
Five years later there's little sweetness left in his image.
Critics denounce him for having done little to combat Ukraine's endemic corruption, the war with Russia-backed separatists in the east grinds on with no clear strategy for ending it, and while his economic reforms may have pleased international lenders, they've left millions of Ukrainian wondering if they can find the money to pay their utilities bills.
A recent journalistic investigation alleged that a factory he controlled was part of a military embezzlement scandal.
And he hasn't sold the chocolate business.
However, Poroshenko also has scored some significant goals for Ukraine's national identity and its desire to move out of Russia's influence.
He signed the association agreement with the European Union - which predecessor Viktor Yanukovych turned away from, setting off the protests that eventually drove him out of office.
Ukrainians now can travel visa-free to the European Union, a significant perk.
He pushed relentlessly for the Ukrainian Orthodox Church to be recognised as self-standing rather than just a branch of the Russian church.
Some see Poroshenko as a protean political survivor, others as an opportunist without loyalty to anyone but himself.
Yulia Tymoshenko has abandoned the elaborate peasant-style blonde hair braid that made her the most recognisable figure of the 2004 Orange Revolution protests, but she's retained the vivid rhetoric and populist leanings.
In her third run for the presidency, the 58-year-old Tymoshenko is playing heavily to the economic distress of millions of Ukrainians.
She has promised to reduce prices for household gas by 50 percent within a month of taking office - calling the price hikes introduced by Poroshenko to satisfy international lenders "economic genocide".
She also promises to take away constitutional immunity for the president, the judiciary and members of parliament.
She declared the so-called Minsk agreements on ending the war in eastern Ukraine effectively dead, and proposed replacing those negotiations with a format based on the Budapest Memorandum involving the countries that gave guarantees of territorial integrity to ex-Soviet countries that gave up their nuclear weapons.
However, signatory Russia disregarded the pact when it annexed Crimea in 2014 and there's no indication Moscow would agree to the new format.
Tymoshenko also has to overcome extensive suspicion of her that has built up in her colourful career.
Before entering politics, she was widely called "the gas princess" because she headed a middleman company that imported Russian gas.
Volodymyr Zelenskiy may be approaching the point where life imitates art.
The 41-year-old comic actor's most famous role is his TV portrayal of a school teacher who becomes president after a video of him denouncing corruption goes viral.
Even before he announced his candidacy, Zelenskiy's name was turning up high in pre-election public opinion polls, with potential voters seemingly encouraged by his "Servant of the People" TV series (which became the name of his party).
Like his TV character, Zelenskiy the candidate has focused strongly on corruption.
He proposes a lifetime ban on holding public office for anyone convicted of corruption, and calls for a tax amnesty under which someone holding hidden assets would declare them, be taxed at 5 percent and face no other measures.
He supports Ukraine's eventual membership in NATO, but only if the country were to approve this in a referendum.
A native Russian-speaker from the industrial city of Kryvyi Rih, his appeal appears to be strong in the heavily Russian-speaking parts of southeast Ukraine.
He says he would negotiate with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the war in eastern Ukraine - calling negotiations with Russia inevitable, though Russia may not feel the same urgency.
Zelenskiy's clean image has been shadowed by his admission that he had commercial interests in Russia through a holding company and by persistent speculation about links with oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky, who owns the television station that airs "Servant of the People."
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