AAI Apprentice Recruitment 2025 The Airports Authority of India (AAI) has announced 1,770 apprentice vacancies in the Eastern Region. This recruitment offers a great opportunity for candidates to gain practical experience in the aviation sector. The application deadline is June 2, 2025 . Below, you’ll find details on eligibility, qualifications, selection process, and how to apply . AAI is offering apprenticeship training under the Apprentices Act, 1961 for graduates, diploma holders, and ITI-certified candidates . Selected applicants will receive monthly stipends and hands-on training in various airport operations. Eligibility Criteria Criteria Details Educational Qualification Graduate, Diploma, or ITI in relevant fields from a recognized institution Age Limit Maximum 26 years (age relaxations for SC/ST/OBC/PWD candidates) Nationality Indian Citizen Selection Process Merit-based shortlisting, document verification, and medical assessment Stipend ₹15,000 (Graduate), ₹12,...
Reading comprehension passage Passage for Sbi Po , SO, Clerk, IBPS mains, SSC CBT, Railways, Police recruitment
Read the
following passage carefully and answer the questions given below it.
Hunger is about people. It is
also about oppression and inequalities. Hunger is about corrupt politicians and
corrupt bureaucracy; it is also about power and powerlessness. Hunger is about
borrowed ideas of science and technology and development which have not worked
in local realities; it is also about the disintegration of local communities;
about loss of values, traditions; culture and spirituality. Ending hunger is
the important unfinished agenda of this century and of independent India.
The world as a whole has
achieved dramatic increase in food production, enough to cover the minimum
needs of the global population. Yet hunger and malnutrition persist in alarming
measure in India and other Third World countries. The World Bank’s estimates are
that over a billion people in the world have problems of food security. The
Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) estimates point out that 64 developing
countries out of 117 will be unable to feed their population adequately and
that 38 out of these developing countries will be able to feed less than half
of their populations adequately.
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