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భారీగా పడిపోయిన ఎస్ బ్యాంకు లాభాలు
ప్రైవేటు బ్యాంకింగ్ దిగ్గజం ఎస్ బ్యాంకు 2019-20 తొలి త్రైమాసికంలో రూ.95.56 కోట్ల లాభాన్ని గడించింది. గత ఆర్థిక సంవత్సరం ఇదే సమయంలో నమోదైన లాభాలతో పోలిస్తే ప్రస్తుతం బ్యాంకు లాభాలు 92.4 శాతం తగ్గాయి.
ఎస్ బ్యాంకు
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Published : Jul 17, 2019, 7:09 PM IST
ప్రస్తుత ఆర్థిక సంవత్సరం తొలి త్రైమాసికంలో ఎస్ బ్యాంకు లాభాలు ఏకంగా 92.4 శాతం తగ్గి.. రూ. 95.56 కోట్లుగా నమోదయ్యాయి. 2018-19 క్యూ1లో రూ.1,265.67 కోట్ల నికర లాభాన్ని గడించింది ఎస్ బ్యాంకు.
మొండి బకాయిలు పెరగడమే లాభాలు భారీగా క్షీణించడానికి కారణమని బ్యాంకు తెలిపింది. గత ఏడాది జూన్లో రూ. 2,824.46 కోట్లుగా ఉన్న మొండి బకాయిలు.. ఈ ఏడాది జూన్ నాటికి రూ.12,091.10 కోట్లకు పెరిగినట్లు పేర్కొంది.
ఆదాయం మాత్రం ప్రస్తుత ఆర్థిక సంవత్సరం క్యూ1లో భారీగా వృద్ధి చెంది.. రూ.9,105.79 కోట్లకు చేరినట్లు వెల్లడించింది ఎస్ బ్యాంక్. 2018-19 మొదటి త్రైమాసికంలో బ్యాంకు ఆదాయం రూ.8,301.06 కోట్లుగా నమోదైంది.
ఇదీ చూడండి: మీ పిల్లలకు ఆర్థిక భరోసా ఇవ్వండిలా..
ప్రస్తుత ఆర్థిక సంవత్సరం తొలి త్రైమాసికంలో ఎస్ బ్యాంకు లాభాలు ఏకంగా 92.4 శాతం తగ్గి.. రూ. 95.56 కోట్లుగా నమోదయ్యాయి. 2018-19 క్యూ1లో రూ.1,265.67 కోట్ల నికర లాభాన్ని గడించింది ఎస్ బ్యాంకు.
మొండి బకాయిలు పెరగడమే లాభాలు భారీగా క్షీణించడానికి కారణమని బ్యాంకు తెలిపింది. గత ఏడాది జూన్లో రూ. 2,824.46 కోట్లుగా ఉన్న మొండి బకాయిలు.. ఈ ఏడాది జూన్ నాటికి రూ.12,091.10 కోట్లకు పెరిగినట్లు పేర్కొంది.
ఆదాయం మాత్రం ప్రస్తుత ఆర్థిక సంవత్సరం క్యూ1లో భారీగా వృద్ధి చెంది.. రూ.9,105.79 కోట్లకు చేరినట్లు వెల్లడించింది ఎస్ బ్యాంక్. 2018-19 మొదటి త్రైమాసికంలో బ్యాంకు ఆదాయం రూ.8,301.06 కోట్లుగా నమోదైంది.
ఇదీ చూడండి: మీ పిల్లలకు ఆర్థిక భరోసా ఇవ్వండిలా..
MEXICO EL CHAPO ESCAPE ROOM
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS / MEXICO NATIONAL COMMISSION OF SECURITY HANDOUT
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 07:23
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Mexico City - 7 July 2019
1. Various of mock jail cell complete with graffiti
2. Various of Ricardo Padilla, "Escape 60" manager, adjusting details in room
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
3. FILE - Stills x 2 - In these Feb. 22, 2014 file photos, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the head of Mexico's Sinaloa Cartel, is escorted to a helicopter in Mexico City following his capture in the beach resort town of Mazatlan.
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Mexico City - 7 July 2019
4. Various exteriors of "Escape 60" centre
5. Various of staff instructing visitors ahead of experience
6. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Felipe Kuri, "Escape 60" player:
"The scenography is very well done, you really feel like it is real, all the clues are very interesting and challenging and interesting."
7. Close of team players being handcuffed
8. Wide of team entering the escape room.
9. Handcuffs on wall
10. Clock counting down time seen through bars of mock cell
11. Various of team inside cell looking for clues
12. Close of hand unlocking door that leads into the next room, a mock prison director's office
13. Various of team looking for clues in prison director's office
14. Various of team members in cell trying to unlock lockers
15. Team in mock office as they hear sound imitating gun shot
16. Low shot of people walking around rooms
17. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Ricardo Padilla, Escape 60 Manager:
"You enter the room with your team, search for clues and solve riddles to open locks and exit the room. Who do you play against ? Against the person that made this room, so this is an intellectual game against the person that developed the room."
18. Various of team playing game, going through clues
19. Cell ceiling with camera
20. Various of team playing seen thought cell bars
21. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Brenda Kuri, player:
"You get transported (into that world) and you imagine things. So yes, it is interesting that there is a game about this topic, at the end it is recreational but with real themes that currently exist - therefore it is interesting."
22. Brenda Kuri playing with her sister and her brother in law
23. Various of team playing the game
24. Heidi Juri escape room player, searching for clues
25. Close of handcuffs on desk
26. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Heidi Kuri, escape room player:
"You get shocked when you see the jail cell status, the bathroom, though it is not that easy to exit a prison and I don't think you get into character that much: When I heard the police siren I did not care, I did not feel they were after me. I felt that it was a family challenge."
27. Various of team figuring out clues
28. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Ricardo Padilla, "Escape 60" Manager:
"It is something that people like to be in the jail and the setting is first level, we put a lot of dedication for the rooms to be good so they like it. I believe that the setting helps a lot into immersing people in a suspenseful and stressful situation."
29. Close of police badge on desk
30. Various of other themed escape room in centre for game called "The 5th soccer game"
31. Various of other themed escape room in centre for game called "Hell Kitchen"
32. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Oswaldo Zavala, Journalist, Writer, Latin America Culture professor at CUNY (City University of New York):
"If one thinks and recalls the myth of Chapo, of course anyone is fascinated by how 'El Chapo' managed to break out from that jail, how did they build that tunnel, how did they managed to not alert the guards despite the noise and digging vibrations, the very moment that he left, the very exact second he entered into the tunnel."
33. Various of Oswaldo Zavaldo, narco culture expert, writing
34. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Oswaldo Zavala, Journalist, Writer, Latin America Culture professor at CUNY (City University of New York):
"At some point everyone wishes to think that the defeat, that means to live in this country (Mexico), perhaps would not be such a bad idea to become a drug-trafficker and this life, which you can not access that life, a rich and powerful man's life. Suddenly it is reachable, then of course he yields that fascination."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Almoloya de Juarez - 23 March 2019
35. Various of town where Altiplano prison is located
36. Aerial shot with Altiplano Prison in background
37. Various exteriors of Altiplano Prison.
38. Various aerials of prison
MEXICO NATIONAL COMMISSION OF SECURITY HANDOUT - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Almoloya de Juarez - 11 July 2015
39. CCTV video said to show Guzman's actual prison break, as released by Mexican authorities
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Almoloya de Juarez - 14 July 2015
40. Various of actual tunnel through which Chapo escaped
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
41. In this Jan. 8, 2016 file photo, drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is made to face the media in Mexico City as he is escorted by Mexican soldiers following his recapture six months after escaping from a maximum security prison.
LEAD IN:
No get-out-of-jail-free card at hand?
In this immersive exhibit in Mexico, visitors can play at breaking out of prison like the infamous real-life drug lord "El Chapo" Joaquin Guzman.
Other than participants in the game, Guzman himself is scheduled to be sentenced in New York on Wednesday, following a conviction in February of murder conspiracy and drug trafficking.
STORYLINE:
Far from the realities of actual prisons, drug cartels and the long arm of the law, people in Mexico City can now play a "jail break" themed game, imitating the infamous escape of the notorious Mexican drug lord known as "El Chapo" from the "El Altiplano" prison in Almoloya de Juarez.
The real-life Joaquin Guzman is expected to be sentenced on Wednesday at a hearing in New York. He was convicted in February on multiple conspiracy counts in a drug-trafficking case.
But back in the immersive jail break experience game, players are just getting ready to make their escape.
"The scenography is very well done, you really feel like it is real, all the clues are very interesting and challenging and interesting," says Felipe Kuri, who is playing the game with his family.
After entering the spooky escape room that recreates "El Chapo's" cell, the players get handcuffed and then the challenge begins: trying to solve 14 clues to put together the puzzle that will set them free.
Behind the experience is "Escape 60", a Brazilian franchise that opened its first facility in Mexico City offering four other rooms, including "The Fifth Soccer Game" and "Kitchen Escape", the ticket for each game costs 15 US dollars per person.
But the jail break game is the biggest challenge of them all, with only 15% of teams managing to cheat their mock jailors and successfully escape.
"You enter the room with your team, search for clues and solve riddles to open locks and exit the room. Who do you play against? Against the person that did this room, so this is an intellectual game against the person that developed the room," explains manager Ricardo Padilla.
The drug-lord "El Chapo", became internationally known as he managed to escape not once but twice from different maximum security jails in Mexico, the latest was through a tunnel that lead to his cell as the CCTV cameras show.
But in this fictional cell, the clock is ticking. Participants have 60 minutes to get out.
"You get transported and you imagine things, so yes it is interesting that there is a game about this topic, at the end it is recreational but with real themes that currently exist therefore it is interesting," says Branda Kuri.
Heidi Kuri says that "you get shocked when you see the jail cell status", but reflects that you remain removed from the actual experience.
"It is not that easy to exit a prison and I don't think you get into character that much: When I heard the police siren I did not care, I did not feel they were after me. I felt that it was a family challenge", Kuri says.
The clock is ticking, every second counts to solve each clue hidden in the scenario, there 14 in total and only an hour to decipher them and that can turn into a real challenge the escape room manager pointed out: "The team must open locks that are scattered all over the place and find the exit. Everything in here can be used to solve the clues".
But once the time's up, the team find out if they managed to achieve the perfect prison break or lost the game.
For Narco-culture experts like Oswaldo Zavala, who has researched the underlying themes as a journalist, published author and academic, the fascination with the myth of "El Chapo" is understandable:
"If one thinks and recalls Chapo's myth, of course anyone is fascinated by how 'El Chapo' managed to prison break from that jail, how did they build that tunnel, how did they managed to not alert the guards despite the noise and digging vibrations, the very moment that he left, the very exact second he entered into the tunnel", Zavala says.
For some the character that Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman represents is one that overcame many obstacles in a country marked by poverty, marginalization and corruption, Zavala adds.:
"At some point everyone wishes to think that the defeat, that means to live in this country (Mexico), perhaps would not be such a bad idea to become a drug-trafficker and this life, which you can not access that life, a rich and powerful man's life. Suddenly it is reachable, then of course he yields that fascination."
Back in the world of real life crime and punishment, prosecutors said in court papers re-capping Guzman's trial that evidence showed that under his orders, the Sinaloa cartel was responsible for smuggling mountains of cocaine and other drugs into the United States during his 25-year reign.
They also said his men were under orders to kidnap, torture and murder anyone who got in his way.
The defense argued he was framed by other traffickers who became government witnesses so they could more lenient hearings in their own cases.
Guzman has been largely cut off from the outside world since his extradition in 2017. Wary of his history of escaping from Mexican prisons, U.S. authorities have kept him in solitary confinement at a Manhattan jail and under close guard at his appearances at the Brooklyn courthouse where his case unfolded.
The big question on Wednesday is whether the notorious Mexican drug lord will go quietly, or use the highly-anticipated hearing as his last chance to speak publicly before spending the rest of his life behind bars at a maximum security U.S. prison.
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