@amazonIN Ensure a single accountable point of contact for closure of this issue.
Throughout this process, my patience and cooperative manner has been taken for granted. I request urgent intervention and a definitive resolution at the earliest.
Please treat this as a formal escalation.
@amazonIN
I am writing to formally escalate the unresolved return and refund issue concerning my order:
Order No: 407-1350871-9559566
Product: Haier 1.5 Ton 5 Star HEXA Inverter Split AC (HSU18EP-TXW5BN-INV)
I request the escalation team to:
Review the complete history of failed pickup attempts and support interactions.
Clarify the official policy regarding advance refunds after repeated pickup failures.
@amazonIN
His name was Lalit Mehta.
He was 36 years old. A civil engineer from Jharkhand who could have worked anywhere. He stayed in Palamu, one of the most corruption ridden districts in the country.
In 1990, he built software. Not for a company. He wrote a programme that made it nearly impossible for government contractors to inflate costs and siphon off public money. He gave it away free.
He built 125 small irrigation dams with local communities at nearly half the government estimated cost. He trained villagers to file RTIs and audit government work themselves.
In May 2008, he began a social audit of NREGA projects in Chatarpur. Out of 108 names on the payment register, only 8 had actually worked. Signatures were forged. Job cards were in the names of people who had migrated. One was in the name of a dead man. An entire 5 lakh rupees pond project was fake.
He compiled everything onto a CD.
He was travelling to meet Jean Dreze the next morning to continue the audit.
He never arrived.
On May 14, 2008, his body was found in the Kandra jungle. A belt around his neck. His face smashed beyond recognition. He was buried as an unidentified body before anyone could reach him. Villagers later identified him from his clothes and exhumed the body themselves.
He is survived by his wife Ashrita Tirkey, whom he married defying caste pressure, and two sons.
His father Jagdish Mehta still holds the CD containing the evidence Lalit died to protect.
No one has been convicted for his murder.
Follow for real stories about people India must never forget.
Here is the bitter lesson Iran realised 40 years ago. They knew they could not fight and win a superpower like the US in traditional warfare but instead devised another powerful strategy. Watch the video below for a better understanding.
~50 crore Indians are watching cricket today.
Semi-final.
T20 World Cup.
New Zealand vs South Africa.
14.4 crore on streaming alone.
Tomorrow?
India vs England.
Wankhede. Mumbai.
That number will triple.
But yes.
Tell me again.
India has "huge problems."
India has "Air Problem."
India has a "Compromised PM."
Meanwhile, let's check on the rest of the world.
Middle East?
On fire.
Ukraine?
Still burning.
America?
Its politicians are busy explaining why they were friends with Epstein.
China?
People aren't even allowed to whisper.
And their own leaders are quietly fighting each other.
In silence. Ofcourse.
Because that's the only option.
But India.
India has PROBLEMS.
The same India where 70 crore people can sit in peace, open an app, and watch cricket.
Not ducking missiles.
Not rationing bread.
Not hide in Bunkers.
Not deleting WhatsApp before the government finds it.
Just... watching cricket.
This is what safety looks like.
And to everyone asking "where is our tax money going?"
It went into building a country stable enough for a handful of elites and liberals to sit comfortably and complain about it.
You're welcome.
The world is on fire.
India is on JioHotstar.
We did not stumble into this stability by accident.
Someone built it.
Someone is maintaining it.
Someone is paying for it.
That someone is you.
And the India you live in.
Respect it.
Or at least, stop embarrassing it.
#T20WorldCup #T20WC26 #NZvsSA
"I will continue to treat people until my last breath." - Padma Shri Dr Tapan Kumar Lahiri.
He never chased wealth—only lives to save.
For 30 years, Dr. Tapan Kumar Lahiri treated patients for free. He donated his salary, his pension, and lived simply so the poor could live at all.
At 84, the Padma Shri awardee still serves with quiet dignity.
In a world where healthcare feels like business, he reminded us: medicine begins with service.
#Cardiologist #Inspiration #HeroesofHumanity #PadmaShri #UttarPradesh
[Cardiologist Dr Tapan Kumar Lahiri, Uttar Pradesh, Doctor, Inspiration, Healthcare]
No.1 Ranking in 𝗧𝗲𝘀𝘁
(at end of each year)
2025 - 𝗔𝗨𝗦*
2024 - AUS
2023 - IND
2022 - AUS
2021 - IND
2020 - AUS
2019 - IND
2018 - IND
2017 - IND
2016 - IND
2015 - SA
2014 - SA
2013 - SA
2012 - SA
2011 - ENG
2010 - IND
2009 - IND
2008 - AUS
2007 - AUS
2006 - AUS
2005 - AUS
2004 - AUS
2003 - AUS
2002 - AUS
2001 - AUS
2000 - AUS
1999 - SA
1998 - AUS
1997 - AUS
1996 - AUS
1995 - AUS
1994 - WI
1993 - WI
1992 - AUS
1991 - WI
1990 - WI
1989 - WI
1988 - WI
1987 - WI
1986 - WI
1985 - WI
1984 - WI
1983 - WI
1982 - WI
1981 - WI
1980 - IND
@premkumarcbn01@KalyanJewellers The article says there is a certain amount of wax and customers examine and finally buy. But isn't the jeweller declare that as non gold and charge for only the gold as they charge less for stone and ruby??