అదానీ సంస్థతో ఒప్పందం కుదిరిన 36 రోజుల్లోనే డేటా సెంటర్కు శంకుస్థాపన జరిగినట్లు మంత్రి లోకేశ్ వెల్లడించారు. ప్రపంచంలోనే అతిపెద్ద డేటా కేంద్రంగా విశాఖకు గుర్తింపు లభిస్తుందన్నారు. డేటా సెంటర్ వల్ల రాష్ట్ర జీడీపీ ఒక శాతం పెరుగుతుందని మంత్రి పేర్కొన్నారు.
ప్రపంచంలోనే అతిపెద్ద డేటాసెంటర్ గా విశాఖ
అదానీ సంస్థతో ఒప్పందం కుదిరిన 36 రోజుల్లోనే డేటా సెంటర్కు శంకుస్థాపన జరిగినట్లు మంత్రి లోకేశ్ వెల్లడించారు. ప్రపంచంలోనే అతిపెద్ద డేటా కేంద్రంగా విశాఖకు గుర్తింపు లభిస్తుందన్నారు.
MNISTER LOKESH
అదానీ సంస్థతో ఒప్పందం కుదిరిన 36 రోజుల్లోనే డేటా సెంటర్కు శంకుస్థాపన జరిగినట్లు మంత్రి లోకేశ్ వెల్లడించారు. ప్రపంచంలోనే అతిపెద్ద డేటా కేంద్రంగా విశాఖకు గుర్తింపు లభిస్తుందన్నారు. డేటా సెంటర్ వల్ల రాష్ట్ర జీడీపీ ఒక శాతం పెరుగుతుందని మంత్రి పేర్కొన్నారు.
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SHOTLIST:
PARLIAMENTARY RECORDING UNIT - NEWS USE ONLY, STRICTLY NOT TO BE USED IN AN COMEDY/SATIRICAL PROGRAMMING OR FOR ADVERTISING PURPOSES; ONLINE USE PERMITTED BUT MUST CARRY CLIENT'S OWN LOGO OR WATERMARK ON VIDEO FOR ENTIRE TIME OF US; NO ARCHIVE
London - 14 February 2019
1. Wide of House of Commons during debate
2. SOUNDBITE (English) David Davis, Conservative MP, former Brexit secretary:
"In the event the European Union does not agree to a deal which is acceptable to this house and government, we still will be leaving on the 29th of March."
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Stephen Barclay, Brexit Secretary: ++INCLUDES VARIOUS CAMERA ANGLES++
"Well I'm very happy to give my right to my right honourable friend and predecessor in this role that assurance. The position of the cabinet has been agreed in terms of No Deal it was agreed in response to the cabinet paper I presented on the 18th of December."
4. Cutaway
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Stephen Barclay, Brexit Secretary:
"The only way to avoid no deal is either to secure a deal on the terms that the Prime Minister has set out with the mandate that the House has given her in response to the measure. Otherwise it is to revoke very because the court case says that the only alternative otherwise would be to revoke - of course I'll give way to the Father of the House (Kenneth Clarke) in a moment - but the only other option will be to revoke and if revoking that requires one to be unconditional an unequivocal."
6. Barclay sitting down, Kenneth Clarke standing up
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Kenneth Clarke, Conservative MP, Father of the House of Commons:
"The idea that simply because the prime minister is probably going to fail, to persuade the other member states to put a time limit on a permanent open border in Europe,
we go for catastrophe of no deal on an arbitrary date on the 29 March is ridiculous. The government could have a policy of coming back here to defer or revoke Article 50 to put the situation in some order."
8. Barclay during debate
9. Wide of debate
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Yvette Cooper, opposition Labour MP: ++INCLUDES CUTAWAY OF DAVIS++
"Is he really saying that if the government has no deal in place by the end of March, if it has run out of time, then it would go ahead with no deal on the 29th of March even when top police chiefs are saying it will make the country less safe, NHS leaders are saying there will be shortages of medicine. Is he 100 percent committed to no deal on the 29th of March, in those circumstances or are there any circumstances in which he would extend Article 50?"
11. Wide of debate
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Stephen Barclay, Brexit Secretary: ++INCLUDES VARIOUS CAMERA ANGLES++
"So my priority is to secure a deal. But the principal operational focus if not, is to prepare for what is the legal position."
13. Wide of debate ++SOUNDBITE BEGINS++
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Justine Greening, Conservative MP, former cabinet member:
"The reality is that the vote against no deal in this house was more convincingly passed including with cross-party support, than the vote to have the prime minister go back and negotiate on alternative arrangements. The government can't simply just pick and choose which votes it wants to support, that is fundamentally wrong and anti-democratic."
15. Wide of debate
16. SOUNDBITE (English) Keir Starmer, Labour Party Brexit spokesman:
"It's obvious it's obvious what the prime minister is up to. She's pretending to make progress while running down the clock. A non-update every other week to buy another two weeks a process, inching ever closer to the 29th of March deadline, in 43 days. We should not be fooled."
17. Wide of debate
STORYLINE:
British Prime Minister Theresa May was scrambling on Thursday to avoid another defeat on her Brexit plans amid opposition from members of her own party who claim she is moving in the wrong direction in efforts to overcome the impasse blocking a deal.
Hard-line pro-Brexit lawmakers in May's Conservative Party said a motion to be voted on in parliament later in the day effectively ruled out the threat of Britain leaving the European Union without an agreement on departure terms and future relations.
This would undermine Britain's bargaining position, argued the Brexiteers, who are threatening to rebel against the government, or abstain, in a vote intended to buy the government more time to seek changes from the EU to a Brexit divorce agreement.
Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay told lawmakers that the only way to avoid a No Deal was "either to secure a deal on the terms the prime minister has set out" or to cancel Brexit - something the government says it won't do.
Two weeks ago, parliament voted to send May back to Brussels to seek changes to a section of the withdrawal agreement intended to ensure an open border between the UK's Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland after Brexit.
Lawmakers also voted to rule out a No Deal exit, though without signaling how that should happen.
May has chosen to ignore that instruction and refuses to take a No Deal Brexit off the table as she attempts to win concessions from the bloc.
Thursday's main vote is on a government motion that essentially treads water, reaffirming parliament's commitment to its decisions of January 29.
Lawmakers will also get the chance to consider amendments from opposition and pro-EU lawmakers seeking to postpone Brexit or steer the UK away from the No Deal cliff edge.
None of the votes is legally binding on the government.
The remaining 27 EU nations insist that the legally binding withdrawal agreement struck with May's government in November can't be renegotiated.
Leaders of the bloc have expressed exasperation at Britain's desire for last-minute changes, and its failure, amid seemingly endless wrangling in the UK parliament, to offer firm proposals.
===========================================================
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SHOTLIST:
PARLIAMENTARY RECORDING UNIT - NEWS USE ONLY, STRICTLY NOT TO BE USED IN AN COMEDY/SATIRICAL PROGRAMMING OR FOR ADVERTISING PURPOSES; ONLINE USE PERMITTED BUT MUST CARRY CLIENT'S OWN LOGO OR WATERMARK ON VIDEO FOR ENTIRE TIME OF US; NO ARCHIVE
London - 14 February 2019
1. Wide of House of Commons during debate
2. SOUNDBITE (English) David Davis, Conservative MP, former Brexit secretary:
"In the event the European Union does not agree to a deal which is acceptable to this house and government, we still will be leaving on the 29th of March."
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Stephen Barclay, Brexit Secretary: ++INCLUDES VARIOUS CAMERA ANGLES++
"Well I'm very happy to give my right to my right honourable friend and predecessor in this role that assurance. The position of the cabinet has been agreed in terms of No Deal it was agreed in response to the cabinet paper I presented on the 18th of December."
4. Cutaway
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Stephen Barclay, Brexit Secretary:
"The only way to avoid no deal is either to secure a deal on the terms that the Prime Minister has set out with the mandate that the House has given her in response to the measure. Otherwise it is to revoke very because the court case says that the only alternative otherwise would be to revoke - of course I'll give way to the Father of the House (Kenneth Clarke) in a moment - but the only other option will be to revoke and if revoking that requires one to be unconditional an unequivocal."
6. Barclay sitting down, Kenneth Clarke standing up
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Kenneth Clarke, Conservative MP, Father of the House of Commons:
"The idea that simply because the prime minister is probably going to fail, to persuade the other member states to put a time limit on a permanent open border in Europe,
we go for catastrophe of no deal on an arbitrary date on the 29 March is ridiculous. The government could have a policy of coming back here to defer or revoke Article 50 to put the situation in some order."
8. Barclay during debate
9. Wide of debate
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Yvette Cooper, opposition Labour MP: ++INCLUDES CUTAWAY OF DAVIS++
"Is he really saying that if the government has no deal in place by the end of March, if it has run out of time, then it would go ahead with no deal on the 29th of March even when top police chiefs are saying it will make the country less safe, NHS leaders are saying there will be shortages of medicine. Is he 100 percent committed to no deal on the 29th of March, in those circumstances or are there any circumstances in which he would extend Article 50?"
11. Wide of debate
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Stephen Barclay, Brexit Secretary: ++INCLUDES VARIOUS CAMERA ANGLES++
"So my priority is to secure a deal. But the principal operational focus if not, is to prepare for what is the legal position."
13. Wide of debate ++SOUNDBITE BEGINS++
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Justine Greening, Conservative MP, former cabinet member:
"The reality is that the vote against no deal in this house was more convincingly passed including with cross-party support, than the vote to have the prime minister go back and negotiate on alternative arrangements. The government can't simply just pick and choose which votes it wants to support, that is fundamentally wrong and anti-democratic."
15. Wide of debate
16. SOUNDBITE (English) Keir Starmer, Labour Party Brexit spokesman:
"It's obvious it's obvious what the prime minister is up to. She's pretending to make progress while running down the clock. A non-update every other week to buy another two weeks a process, inching ever closer to the 29th of March deadline, in 43 days. We should not be fooled."
17. Wide of debate
STORYLINE:
British Prime Minister Theresa May was scrambling on Thursday to avoid another defeat on her Brexit plans amid opposition from members of her own party who claim she is moving in the wrong direction in efforts to overcome the impasse blocking a deal.
Hard-line pro-Brexit lawmakers in May's Conservative Party said a motion to be voted on in parliament later in the day effectively ruled out the threat of Britain leaving the European Union without an agreement on departure terms and future relations.
This would undermine Britain's bargaining position, argued the Brexiteers, who are threatening to rebel against the government, or abstain, in a vote intended to buy the government more time to seek changes from the EU to a Brexit divorce agreement.
Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay told lawmakers that the only way to avoid a No Deal was "either to secure a deal on the terms the prime minister has set out" or to cancel Brexit - something the government says it won't do.
Two weeks ago, parliament voted to send May back to Brussels to seek changes to a section of the withdrawal agreement intended to ensure an open border between the UK's Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland after Brexit.
Lawmakers also voted to rule out a No Deal exit, though without signaling how that should happen.
May has chosen to ignore that instruction and refuses to take a No Deal Brexit off the table as she attempts to win concessions from the bloc.
Thursday's main vote is on a government motion that essentially treads water, reaffirming parliament's commitment to its decisions of January 29.
Lawmakers will also get the chance to consider amendments from opposition and pro-EU lawmakers seeking to postpone Brexit or steer the UK away from the No Deal cliff edge.
None of the votes is legally binding on the government.
The remaining 27 EU nations insist that the legally binding withdrawal agreement struck with May's government in November can't be renegotiated.
Leaders of the bloc have expressed exasperation at Britain's desire for last-minute changes, and its failure, amid seemingly endless wrangling in the UK parliament, to offer firm proposals.
===========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.