Nepal Airlines arrived with 12 Body and 24 workers
à¤िडियो हेर्न तल को बक्समा क्लिक गर्नुहोस
The bodies of 12 Nepalese guards who were killed in Taliban suicide bomb attack on Monday morning are being flown home today.
The government on Tuesday evening chartered an aircraft of Nepal Airlines Corporation (NAC) to bring the bodies. The plane left Kathmandu for Kabul on the wee hours of Wednesday and has already reached Kabul.
At a press meet organized on Tuesday, spokesperson for Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) Bharat Raj Poudel informed that the government has made necessary arrangement to bring the bodies from Afghanistan, and Charge d’affaires to Pakistan, Tirtha Raj Aryal, had been directed to ensure treatment to the Nepalis injured in the attack.
Poudel further informed that two of the injured Nepalis – Krishna Bahadur Deuja and Man Bahadur Thapa – had been airlifted to Apollo Hospital, New Delhi for further treatment.
Other Nepalese working in Afghanistan and wishing to return home will be brought in the same NAC aircraft provided there is enough capacity.
The NAC departed from Nepal with four medical persons, three police personnel, and one official each from Home Ministry, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Employment Promotion Board.
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How to make an insurance complaint
If you’re not happy with the service offered by your insurance company, or the way they have treated you, you have the right to complain.
Why complain about an insurance company?
Step 1 – Try to resolve the complaint informally
Step 2 – Send a written complaint
Step 3 – Ask the Financial Ombudsman Service for help
Do you need an ‘expert’ to help with your insurance complaint?
Why complain about an insurance company?
There are a number of reasons why you might make a complaint about an insurance company:
Repair work has been done to a poor standard
Your policies have been automatically renewed without you realising it
You might feel that your policies weren’t explained properly when they were sold to you
After you make a complaint, the insurance company will look at your complaint and see if it’s appropriate to compensate you.
If you think your claim has been unfairly rejected, follow the link below:
What to do if your insurance claim is rejected
There’s a simple, step-by-step process you can go through to try and resolve the problem – first by complaining to your insurance company and then by asking the Financial Ombudsman Service to investigate your complaint for free.
Step 1 – Try to resolve the complaint informally
If you bought your policy through an insurance broker, they might make your complaint for you – it’s worth asking, to save yourself the hassle.
It’s sometimes possible to resolve a complaint informally with a quick phone call to the insurance company’s helpline. It’s a good first step – but make sure to note down who you spoke to, when, and what was said, just in case you need to take things further.
Step 2 – Send a written complaint
If you’re not happy with the company’s response to your informal complaint, or you prefer to write a letter than use the phone, you can make a written complaint. Every insurance company must publish a formal complaints procedure that you can follow if things go wrong. It tells you who to contact and when to expect a response. Many companies publish this on their website. If you can’t find it, contact them and ask for a copy.
How to write a formal insurance complaint letter
Use our letter template (DOC 31KB) or follow the tips below to write your letter of complaint.
Mark the letter ‘complaint’ clearly at the top
Put the date
Give your name and policy number
Explain your complaint clearly, stating what you’re unhappy about and when it happened
Include any evidence you have to support your complaint
Say what you would like the company to do to put things right
State that if you are unhappy with the company’s response you will take the matter to the Financial Ombudsman Service (see below)
Keeping records of your complaint
Keep a copy of any correspondence and notes of any telephone conversations so you can pass them on to the Ombudsman Service if you need to. You should also keep:
Every letter you receive
A copy of every letter you send
For every phone call related to your complaint, a note of the time, the date, who you spoke to and what was said
Step 3 – Ask the Financial Ombudsman Service for help
What is the Financial Ombudsman Service?
The Financial Ombudsman Service is a free service which helps to resolve disputes between consumers and financial services organisations, and deals with 5,000 enquiries every working day.
The Ombudsman Service is completely free to use.
When can you use the Financial Ombudsman Service?
Before you can use the Ombudsman Service, you have to follow your insurance company’s official complaints procedure. Once you’ve complained they have eight weeks to respond. You can contact the Ombudsman Service initially for advice, but they can only act after you get a final response from the insurance company, or as soon as the eight weeks are up.
How to complain to the Financial Ombudsman Service?
Download and complete a complaint form from the Financial Ombudsman Service website. Send it off with a copy of the final response letter from your insurance company plus any other documents you have that support your case.
Find out how to complain to the Financial Ombudsman Service on their website
What will the Ombudsman Service do?
The Ombudsman Service will look at the case based on the facts – you don’t have to worry about presentation or arguments, just about telling the truth in your own words. They will listen to your side of the story and the insurance company’s side and try to come to a fair judgement. They’ll either reject or accept your complaint, or help you come to a settlement with the company. If it decides you’ve been unfairly treated it has the power to make the company:
Explain their actions
Apologise
Pay compensation
Your case will first of all be looked at by an ‘adjudicator’ but if either you or your insurance company is unhappy with the outcome, it can be referred up the chain to an ‘Ombudsman’. The Ombudsman’s decision is final and binding on your insurance company. If you’re still not happy with it, you can still take the case to court, but you’ll have to pay a lot of expenses. If the Ombudsman Service concludes you don’t deserve compensation then it’s extremely unlikely that you’ll win.
Do you need an ‘expert’ to help with your insurance complaint?
No. You shouldn’t need any special help or support if you complain. Also, the Ombudsman Service is a free and informal service and they prefer to hear from you in your own words.
Everyone has the right to have someone else to act on their behalf. Some people might like to have someone from their local Citizens Advice Bureau or a relative or friend to help them with their complaint.
तल को बक्समा क्लिक गर्नुहोस
Nepal Airlines arrived with 12 Body and 24 workers
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