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You are here: Home / 2018 / Archives for June 2018

Archives for June 2018

Siddaramaiah dissapointed with HDK’s full budget

June 25, 2018 by Nasheman


A video clip in which senior Congress leader Siddaramaiah is seen expressing disappointment over the presentation of a fresh budget by Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy has gone viral. Siddaramaiah, the chief minister in the previous Congress regime, is undergoing nature therapy at ‘Shanthivana’ in Dharmastala. In the video footage (which appears to have been recorded on a mobile phone) first broadcast by a news channel on Sunday,
Siddaramaiah is seen discussing politics with MLAs S T Somashekhar, Byrathi Basavaraj, Muniratna and others. He is seen telling the legislators that the government is preparing to present a fresh budget even when a common minimum programme had not been prepared

Siddaramaiah, Chairman of the Co-ordination and Monitoring Committee in the coalition government, had told Kumaraswamy he must present a supplementary budget instead of a full-fledged one. However, Kumaraswamy met Congress chief Rahul Gandhi and got clearance for a full budget which he will present on July 5.

Filed Under: News & Politics

HDK to take guidlines from Devegowda on Cauvery dispute

June 25, 2018 by Nasheman


Chief Minister Kumaraswamy said that he will follow JD(S) Supremo Devegowda’s guidelines regarding Cauvery dispute.

It has been learned that Devegowda is said to advise his son not to tread the confrontational route and adopt a flexible strategy while handling both – the Centre and Tamil Nadu.

Devegowda had instead asked to go for a compromise in the interest of both the state and the coalition government.

Kumaraswamy is expected to write a detailed letter to PM Modi and Union Water Resources Minister Nitin Gadkari, seeking redressal in a weeks time.

The Centre constituted the controversial Cauvery Management Authority without the Karnataka representatives last week. The state had earlier refused to nominate its members citing inconsistencies in the process.

Filed Under: News & Politics

SC to hear disqualified AIADMK leaders’ plea for transferirng case

June 25, 2018 by Nasheman


The Supreme Court will on Wednesday hear a plea by 17 AIADMK MLAs of the Dinakaran faction seeking the transfer of the case challenging their disqualification to the apex court from the Madras High Court.

A vacation bench comprising Justice Arun Mishra and Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul agreed to hear the plea after it was mentioned on Monday for an early hearing.

The lawyer for the MLAs said that they were seeking the transfer of the case as there has been an inordinate delay to decide against their disqualification and under the Representation of People Act, a vacant seat has to be filled up within six months of its occuring.

There was split verdict by the Madras High Court on their plea challenging their disqualification. Thereafter, the matter was referred to a third judge and is still pending.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Harassed, discriminated’: Story of Assam’s Bengali origin people

June 23, 2018 by Nasheman

At around midnight of November 29, 2016, Morjina Bibi was woken up by repeated knocks on her door.

“When I opened the door, I saw two female police officers. Within a minute, several other policemen entered my house and asked me go with them,” the 27-year-old.

Bibi was thrown into detention centre for being a “Doubtful” or “D” voter – a concept introduced by the Election Commission in 1997. Those marked as “D” in electoral rolls are stripped of their citizenship rights.

She walked free on July 17, 2017 after it turned out she was a case of mistaken identity.

Bibi, who is from Fofana Part I village in the northeastern Goalpara district, had spent nearly nine months in detention.

I couldn’t eat, I couldn’t sleep. The only thought that came to my mind was, ‘What did I do? Why did they put me in this hell?'”
MORJINA BIBI

“I asked them, ‘What was my fault, why are you doing this to me?’ I had not done anything wrong. They ordered me to keep quiet,” she said.

She was sent to Kokrajhar detention centre the next day.

“I couldn’t eat, I couldn’t sleep. The only thought that came to my mind was, ‘What did I do? Why did they put me in this hell?'” she said, sitting in the courtyard of her hut.


Bengali origin people suffer from mass illiteracy and poverty [Al Jazeera]
Life inside the detention centre was difficult with poor quality food and crowded cells, she said.

“In one room, there were between 50 and 60 people. People collided with each other while sleeping on the floor.”

Mistaken identity
She had been mistaken for Merjina Begum, a woman from another village.

Bibi’s case was taken up by All India United Democratic Front (AIUDF), a party that advocates for people of Bengali origin, who have often complained of harassment at the hands of authorities.

“When we found that another woman of the same name had a case, we filed for her bail,” said Aminul Islam, AIUDF’s general secretary.

The fear [of undocumented immigrants] was real, but it was amplified by the media

Bibi says police have yet to apologise or offer compensation.

Activists say police harassment in the name of detecting so-called foreigners has ripped apart families and instilled fear among the people.

Ruhul Amin, an 18 year old from a village near Assam’s capital, Guwahati, was inconsolable as he narrated the story of his parents, who are currently stuck in separate detention centres.

In 1997, his father and mother Ayub Ali and Rahima Khatun were sent a notice to prove their nationality, which meant they were required to prove their legitimacy in one of the 100 Foreigners Tribunals (FTs), specialized courts to decide on the citizenship of people who are suspected of being foreigners.

After losing their case in Guwahati High Court in 2015, they were taken into custody.

“We sold the shop to fight the case in Supreme Court. Father had already sold the land to fight the case in high court,” said Amin, through tears.

Detention centres
Amin was forced to drop out of school to support his siblings, including his 14 year old brother. His elder sister was married with the financial help from neighbours and relatives.

“Boys of my age are studying. I too had a dream to study and do something good in life but that dream is not going to be fulfilled any more,” he said.

Amin, like many members of the community, is terrified of the police. He fears he could also be declared a foreigner.

“If they arrest me and put in the detention centre what will happen to my younger brother? Who will look after him?”

Ruhul Amin’s parents are among 899 people who are in six detention centres across Assam [ Al Jazeera]
His hope is now pinned on the Supreme Court. If they lose the case in the top court, the parents will languish behind bars for life.

They are among 899 people who are in six detention centres across Assam – all of which are currently located inside district jails.

The government is planning to build a large detention centre in Goalpara district.

NRC exercise
Meanwhile, Assam is carrying out a massive operation and counting its citizens to update the National Register of Citizens (NRC) – the first since 1951 – aimed at finding out the exact number undocumented immigrants.

But more than 250,000 cases of “D” voters and suspected citizens pending in FT courts have been excluded from the NRC process, which means that their lives will remain in limbo in the years to come.

Their children born after 2003 will also not be eligible to become Indian citizens, putting their future in jeopardy.

Moreover, those who won’t find place in the NRC list, slated to be published end of June, will have to go through the long-drawn and arduous process in the tribunal courts.

“It will take several generations for the cases to be finalised. What will happen to their children? Neither they can study nor can they get jobs,” said Islam, the AIUDF leader.

He called for fast track courts to expedite the cases as India’s judiciary is already burdened with some 30 million backlogged cases.

The state government, led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), came to power in 2016 on an anti-foreigner platform. The right-wing party denounces people of Bengali origin as infiltrators.

Some 15,000 people were declared foreigners last year under the BJP administration. According to government figures nearly 90,000 people were declared as foreigners between 1985 and 2016.

The uncertainty has led many to commit suicide.

Last week Gopal Das, 65, ended his life apparently after he received a notice from the Foreigners Tribunal in Udalguri district. His family, as reported by a local news website, claims his name is included in the 1966 voters list.

Activists say some of the detained were wrongly declared foreigners in judgements where defendants did not turn up in courts.

They also allege that many of the so-called declared foreigners did not receive notice from the court.

Aman Wadud, who practices at the Guwahati High Court, says the process of identifying undocumented immigrants or “D” voters is “arbitrary”, “random” and done without proper investigation.

You are putting people on trial without an investigation. It’s like filing a charge-sheet in a criminal case without investigation

“You are putting people on trial without an investigation. It’s like filing a charge-sheet in a criminal case without investigation,” Wadud said.

The process of proving one’s citizenship takes a heavy financial toll on the people who are summoned, most of whom are poor or marginal farmers, who earn 250 and 350 rupees ($3.6-$5) a day.

“They sell their cattle and lands to pay legal fees, which may go up to 50,000 rupees ($734),” said Wadud, who has successfully fought the cases of wrongfully declared foreigners.

Lawyer Aman Wadud says the process of proving one’s citizenship takes a heavy financial toll on the people
“People are spending their lifetime of income in proving their citizenship as there are few pro bono lawyers or those who charge less,” he said.

In the current environment, genuine Indian citizens are being declared foreigners and people are sent multiple notices.

Genuine citizens harassed
Ajmal Haque, who served in the Indian army for 30 years, was asked to prove his citizenship by border police – a specialised force of more than 4,000 personnel tasked with identifying undocumented immigrants since it was formed in 1962.

He subsequently proved his citizenship.

Though procedures have been laid out, activists and those accused have said it is hardly followed on the ground.

“Election commission can mark ‘D’ voters without hardly any investigation while the border police follow few procedures in identifying suspected citizens,” said Wadud, the lawyer.

Our basic job is to submit the names to the Foreigners Tribunal after proper verification of the papers if any individual is suspected to be illegally staying here

Sanjoy Hazarika, chairman of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, says due process should be followed in handling “D” voters cases and the NRC process.

“The process must be clearly in accordance with the constitutional provisions that we accept and abide by, especially Articles 14, 19 and 21,” he said.

Article 21 says: “No one shall be deprived of his life and personal liberty except by due process, which includes judicial process not just administrative process.”

Sajahan Kazi, a government school teacher, was marked “D” voter in 1997. It took 20 years for him to prove his citizenship, during which he was stripped of voting and other rights.

People of Bengali origin feel discriminated and harassed by police.

Police refute the allegation of harassment
Moinal Mollah of Barpeta district’s Bohri village was detained despite his parents and grandparents declared as Indian citizens with the necessary documents.

He remained in Goalpara detention centre for nearly three years until the Supreme Court ordered his release. A non-profit, MY-FACTS, provided free legal assistance to Mollah.

“My brother took money on interest and spent nearly two lakh rupees ($2,938) while we were fighting the case in the high court. Till today we are repaying the debts,” Mollah told Al Jazeera as his parents sat beside him.

“I didn’t receive any compensation from the government, neither have they apologised to me.”

Assam border police chief Raunak Ali Hazarika refuted the allegation of harassment.

“Legally it’s not possible. Our basic job is to submit the names to the Foreigners Tribunal after proper verification of the papers if any individual is suspected to be illegally staying here,” Hazarika told Al Jazeera.

Nearly 2,000 people were masscared in Nellie village in 1983, but no action has been taken against perpetrators, say community leaders [Al Jazeera]
He denied that linguistic minorities or Bengali-origin Muslims were being harassed.

“No way that’s possible, as the process of enquiry does not have any specific criteria to enquire on religious or linguistic line”.

Indigenous versus the outsiders
Assam is home to 32 million people – one-third of them are Muslim, most of them Bengali origin.

The first arrival of Bengali cultivators began in the 19th century after British colonial rulers took over Assam from the Ahom king in 1826.

Back then, Assam was sparsely populated with dense jungles. In 1855, an English military officer, Major John Butler, called Assam a “dreary and desolate wilderness … devoid of man, beasts, or birds”.

By the early 20th century, millions of Bengali people were settled in Assam, as part of the British policy. The fertile land of Assam attracted people not only from Bengal but also from Bihar and Odisha states.

The policy of bringing more Bengali immigrants by the government of Sayed Mohammad Sadullah in the 1930s as part of its “Grow More Food” programme further polarised Assam’s politics on the issue of indigenous versus the outsiders.

CS Mullan, superintendent of the 1931 Assam Census, likened Bengali immigrants to “an invading, conquering army, to a terrifying birds of prey, and to insects”.

For Mullan, an Indian civil service officer, Bengali immigrants were like “vultures” looking to grab lands.

“The motivation behind such irresponsible and utterings was clear. He wanted the Assamese and the immigrants to be set against each other,” wrote academic Amalendu Guha in his book, “Planter Raj to Swaraj”.

After India’s independence in 1947, more than 200,000 Bengali people were deported to what was then East Pakistan under the Prevention of Infiltration from Pakistan scheme.

Author Rizwana Shamshad wrote in her book, “Bangladeshi Migrants in India: Foreigners, Refugees, or Infiltrators?”, that a narrative was built around Bengali origin people as “land grabbers” and “settlers” against ethnic Assamese depicted as “vulnerable”.

Colonial role overlooked
The dominant narrative in Assam has overlooked the colonial role in bringing immigrants to Assam.

Sushant Talukdar, a senior journalist in Guwahati, said the media helped “perpetuate the stereotype about the community”.

“The fear [of undocumented immigrants] was real, but it was amplified by the media,” he said.

“We cannot deny that there is no problem, but media should have played a responsible role in finding out facts and instead of being carried away by the agenda of the political parties.”

Hafiz Ahmed based in Guwahati has been vocal about the problems faced by his community
India’s Supreme Court quoted Mullan in its 2003 judgment, when it scrapped a controversial tribunal, the Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunal) Act (IMDT), set up in 1983 to try suspected foreigners.

Assam politicians had demanded the repeal of the IMDT Act, under which the burden of proof was on the state.

“The SC brought back foreigners Act 1946, a British era law, under which the burden of proof shifted to suspects,” Wadud said, adding that it is against natural justice.

Islam of the AIUDF party says the agenda over who is a foreigner has gradually changed over the years.

“In the 1970s, they said remove outsiders, including Indians from other states. Then they said remove foreigners, including Nepalis and Bangladeshis,” Haque said. “Now they are saying exempt Bengali Hindus and deport Bengali origin Muslims. From outsiders it has come down to just Muslims. It’s a secular state, rules should be applied equally to all.”

The son of the soil
Among those of Bengali origin, such as Suleman Qasimi from Nellie village, there is a belief that people who have harmed and killed Muslims have enjoyed impunity.

“We are bhumiputra, the son of the soil. Do not call us Bangladeshis, we are Indians,” he said, anger palpable on his face.

His brother was among the nearly 2,000 people massacred in 1983 in his village during the height of anti-Bengali movement.

“[Until now], no one has been charged for the carnage, except for a compensation of 5,000 rupees ($73),” said Qassemi, who is the leader of a local mosque.

We are bhumiputra, the son of the soil. Do not call us Bangladeshis, we are Indians

“Muslims were killed because they voted in defiance of the election boycott called by the protesters. My brother died for democracy,” he said, claiming that those who harassed and killed Muslims during the Assam Movement have been rewarded.

In 2016, the BJP government in the state announced compensation of 500,000 rupees ($7,345) to the more than 800 killed in police firing during the anti-Bengali Assam agitation.

But successive Congress governments, Qasimi said, did nothing to provide justice to the victims.

Organisations and political groups such as All Assam Students Union (AASU), which led the Assam agitation between 1979-85, have played on the fear of undocumented immigrants.

“The problem is that the BJP is creating a fear psychosis that Muslim population is growing by leaps and bounds and they are going to swamp the local indigenous population,” Assam Congress leader Prodyut Bordoloi said.

He said that the migration from Bangladesh has “almost stopped in the past 25 to 30 years”.

Muslims have been well represented in the state Assembly with 30 members from the community in the 126-seat state assembly, but they are at the bottom of development indices.

The community suffers from mass illiteracy and poverty while the fear of being branded foreigners persists.

Assimilated into Assamese society
Hafiz Ahmed, a Guwahati-based Bengali-origin Muslim and activist, says that Muslims face discrimination and harassment despite having living in the state for generations.

Children of people whose cases are pending in Foreigners Tribunal are also not eligible to become Indian citizens [Al Jazeera]
“My grandfather came to Assam … We do not need any certificate that we are Assamese,” he said. “Muslims have contributed a lot to the Assamese language and culture. And they have always wanted to be assimilated with the greater Assamese nationality.”

The 54-year-old started writing Miya poetry to express the anguish and pain at the way the community has been treated.

“Miyan means gentleman but here it is used in a derogatory manner to refer to Bengali origin people,” he said. “Miya poetry is a voice against injustice and discrimination.

“For the first time, we have seen that some young people from the community have come out. They have used literature as a means of protest.”

AL JAZEERA

Filed Under: Culture & Society

BJP criticize naming Haj Bhavan after Tipu Sulthan

June 23, 2018 by Nasheman


The BJP has deny Minister for Minority Welfare B.Z. Zameer Ahmed Khan’s accounted for a move to name the State Haj Bhavan, near Kempegowda International Airport, after Tipu Sultan.

“The former government made social distress by celebrating Tipu Sultan Jayanti. The new government should oppose any such attempts at lauding Tipu,” said Shobha Karandlaje, MP, and BJP general secretary.
She asserted that the Congress fared inadequately in Karnataka because of its choice to celebrate Tipu Jayanti.

Filed Under: Culture & Society

What pushed Argentina to brink of World Cup elimination?

June 23, 2018 by Nasheman

 Millions of hearts were broken by the 0-3 defeat of World Cup favorites Argentina in the game facing Croatia at Nizhny Novgorod Stadium on Thursday in Russia.

With just one point from two group games, Jorge Sampaoli’s team is now on the brink of elimination. What’s done is done. But looking back to just a few weeks before the tournament, we may find that the seeds of the tragedy have already been sown, reports Xinhua news agency.

High hopes were pinned on Mauro Icardi, 25, to help Argentina when he brought back Serie A side Inter Milan into the Champions League after six seasons, but his fantastic attacking ability was denied by Sampaoli.

Icardi was included in Sampaoli’s preliminary list of 35 players announced on May 14. The Inter captain and the league’s best striker scored 29 goals in the Serie A.

However, Sampaoli’s final choice of not bringing Icardi to Russia was based on “players that can do many functions to give us different characteristics,” said the coach in a press conference before the tournament kicked off.

Facing the stronger and taller defenders from Iceland and Croatia, neither Lionel Messi nor Sergio Aguero could create a good chance by themselves.

The Argentine wingers have tried their best to keep crossing over, but the world-class strikers failed to bring down the rivals’ defence.

With Icardi on the field, the situation might be very different.

“Inside the penalty area, Icardi has no equal on a global scale. When a cross arrives, he is deadly. If you want to build moves with central passing, then Gonzalo Higuain or Sergio Aguero are more suited, but if you do like Inter with tons of crosses flung into the box, where are you going to get anyone better than Icardi?” Argentine legend Hernán Jorge Crespo said.

Sampaoli’s four attackers formation turned out to be incompatible with Argentina’s original system. Without Icardi, the team couldn’t realise Sampaoli’s intention to make effective attacks. To make things worse, the team couldn’t defend their goal with the absence of another key player.

Sergio Romero injured his knee last month in the run-up to the tournament. The No.1 Argentine goalkeeper said he could recover before the World Cup, but the team went without him.

When Willy Caballero’s poor performance contributed the first blood to his opponent on Thursday, Romero was missed by all Argentine fans.

The last straw seemingly happened to be the core of the team — Lionel Messi — who has been considered as the king to bring his people to victory. However, football is not a one-man game. It is probably the team’s awe of him that has torn the team apart.

When Messi lost a penalty chance in Argentina’s 1-1 draw with Iceland, he was reportedly too frustrated to talk to anyone after that match.

To cheer him up, the Argentina Football Association invited Messi’s wife Antonella Rocuzzo to Russia to console the team’s No.1 star. However, his overwhelming emotions kept him from carrying out his duties as a captain to encourage his teammates who were just as upset as he was.

Crespo once told the Italian media that Icardi couldn’t be named on the final 23-men list because the forward isn’t Messi’s friend. Whether it is true or not, the 2014 World Cup runners-up seem to have locker room problems.

When the team fell behind 1-0 on Thursday, few midfielders ran back to deal with Croatian counter-attacks. Instead, players were witnessed by the huge audience complaining about their teammates’ faults on the field. A team falling apart will inevitably fall from the top.

There is still a shred of hope for Messi’s World Cup dream. Nigeria defeated Iceland 2-0 Friday in the second round of group games, raising a slim possibility of Argentina entering the elimination period.

If Messi wants to lead his team to advance to the last 16, they must smash Nigeria in its third group match first. The two Nigerian players John Obi Mikel and Odion Ighalo, who play in the Chinese Super League, are good at creating counter-attacks.

It would also be more favorable for Argentina if Croatia stays unbeaten against Iceland in the third round of group matches.

Filed Under: Sports

Farbrace to coach England for T20Is against Australia, India

June 23, 2018 by Nasheman


England’s assistant coach Paul Farbrace will step up as the coach for the one-off T20 match against Australia at Edgbaston on June 27 and the three T20s against India from July 3-8.

Head coach Trevor Bayliss will spend the period watching the England Lions, some County Championship cricket and the One-Day Cup final on June 30, according to a report by the BBC website.

He will then return to his role for the One-day Internationals (ODI) against India.

In February, Bayliss said that international teams should not play Twenty20 cricket except for in the lead-up to World T20 events, just allowing domestic teams and franchises to play the format.

He is to step down as coach in 2019, with Farbrace one of the main candidates to replace him.

Filed Under: Sports

Seema’s story: Educating girls to negotiate life, become change agents

June 23, 2018 by Nasheman


Inside a dimly-lit classroom in this district, with its walls decorated with drawings and paintings made by children, Seema Yadav, 36, is teaching a group of 25 girls who are sitting in a circle in one corner. These are girls who were either never enrolled in school or had to drop out due to various reasons. They are now way behind academically compared to other students of their age.

At the Udaan innovatory bridge school of Care India, almost 125 km away from state capital Lucknow, such girls of 10 to 16 years age are taught for 11 months so they could catch up.

Every year, nearly 100 girls cover the syllabus of six years within 11 months. These girls then appear for the 5th Grade annual examination, which ensures their admission in any formal school in the state.

Almost 1,800 girls have been taught in this preparatory school set up by the Care India project in collaboration with Sarvodaya Ashram in 1999.

High dropout rate among girls is a serious concern in India. As per the 2017 Annual Survey of Education Report (ASER), once the eight years of elementary schooling are completed, girls begin to abandon schools in far greater numbers than boys.

According to the report, while at the primary level, 5.7 per cent girls are not enrolled in schools compared to 4.7 per cent boys, the enrollment gap widens steadily as they grow. At the secondary level, by the time they turn 18, over 32 per cent girls are not enrolled in schools compared to 28 per cent boys.

The survey suggests that the predominant reason for girls dropping out is family constraints. The study also reveals that over 70 per cent out-of-school youth have mothers who have never been to school.

Seema, a resident of Mirzapur district, was just 17 when she first started teaching here to help support her own education. She has been now associated with this residential school for the past 18 years.

Almost every girl in this school has a tragic tale to share: Of domestic violence, poverty, untouchability, discrimination and maginalisation which is prevalent in most districts of Uttar Pradesh. Seema is no exception.

As a child, she helplessly witnessed the horror of domestic violence for years. She would cower in a corner of her room and watch her jobless father go on a rampage in the house and take out his frustration on her mother.

She struggled to get away from that environment and eventually eloped with a man of another caste. However, her struggles were magnified when her husband, Hariram Singh, died of cancer a few years after the couple were married in a Sitarampur court.

“My father told me to forget everything and pretend as if I had never married. I told him I would marry again only when he gave me assurance that no domestic violence would happen. He gave me no answer,” she said.

“Some incidents you experience as a child leave you shattered throughout your life. I saw terrible things happening at my home that shattered my spirit,” Seema said.

When she was a child, there was pressure on her to quit her education and take up odd jobs, but she toiled hard, often trapped between discrimination and poverty. Her resolve eventually prevailed over adversity and she finally managed to graduate and become one of the handful of girls from her village to do so.

Seema went on to complete her post-graduation, finished her B.Ed. and also cleared the eligibility examination that qualified her to teach in government schools.

Now she teaches mathematics and life skills to girls who face similar adversities and tries to change their fate just a education changed hers.

According to Sangita 14, and Reetu,16, two students studying at Udaan school, “Seema didi is an inspiration.”

“When we were admitted in this school some months ago, we knew nothing. We feared to hold a pen; we could not read, write or speak properly for we lacked motivation and confidence. We are reading story books now, do ganit (mathematics), and enjoy doing extra-curriculum activities,” said Reetu, who has seen her share of domestic violence, especially when her father gets drunk.

She wants to become a police officer and prevent drunkards from committing crimes in her village.

According to the programme coordinator of the school, Urmila Srivastava, the Udaan project has inspired the entire state education system in Uttar Pradesh.

“The module of preparatory education has now been adopted by almost all preparatory schools across Uttar Pradesh which shows how influential our curriculum has been,” she said.

“We don’t just teach girls here, we educate them about the processes that are essential for their life such as leadership skill, behavior and personal hygiene. To bring reforms in the predominant casteist and illiteracy-riven state with child marriage issues, only focused education can bring long-term social changes,” added Vandana Mishra, the programme manager.

In a survey conducted by a team of Udaan teachers, 460 out of the 1,567 girls who graduated from this school were found still unmarried, suggesting that education helped them to negotiate their marriage. The survey also found that those girls were able to support themselves and helped with the education of their younger siblings as well.

“Most of the girls, after spending 11 months in this school, inspire their siblings at home to develop interest in studies and learn to maintain personal hygiene,” Vandana added.

However, the major problem the girl-students face is overall poverty in their homes and the lack of resources to continue their studies once they clear the fifth-class examination.

In 2017, Seema adopted a nine-year-old boy, Anirudh, from a relative. She says the satisfaction of nurturing children from marginalised backgrounds gives her more comfort than she can express in words.

“I see myself in their eyes. I relate my struggle with their life. I often cry with them… This inspires me to make more efforts to change their lives,” she says and breaks down.

Filed Under: Women

Calling Rahul jehadi-Maoist sympathiser is absurd: Chidambaram

June 23, 2018 by Nasheman


Union Minister Arun Jaitley’s allegation that “jehadists and Maoists” have earned the sympathy of Congress chief Rahul Gandhi is “laughable and absurd” former Finance Minister P. Chidambaram said on Saturday, adding that the party is “stoutly opposed” to the two groups.

Jaitley, in his hard-hitting blog post on Friday had said while “jehadis and Maoists” were threatening the rights of citizens, human rights organisations “taken over by the ultra-left” never spoke of this.

He alleged that even though the Congress historically and ideologically would have been opposed to these groups, they have earned sympathy in Rahul Gandhi’s heart.

“He had no qualms about joining those who raised subversive slogans at JNU (Jawaharlal Nehru University) and Hyderabad.

“With this initial success, the others amongst the so-called federal front have forgotten the dangers of these groups to India and Indian democracy.

“The political adventurists in parties like AAP (Aam Aadmi Party), TMC (Trinamool Congress) and the like only look for a political opportunity in these groups,” he wrote in his blog.

Senior Congress leader Chidambaram, hit out at Jaitley saying the United Progressive Alliance government led by the Congress had fought the jehadis in Jammu and Kashmir and brought down the level of violence substantially.

“The allegation that jehadists and Maoists have earned the sympathy of Rahul Gandhi is laughable and absurd. Congress is stoutly opposed to the two groups,” Chidambaram said in a series of tweets.

“Who can forget that Congress practically lost its entire leadership in Chhattisgarh to Maoist violence? Under UPA, the government fought the jehadists in Jammu and Kashmir and brought down the level of violence substantially,” he added.

The Union Minister, who underwent kidney replacement in May and is yet to rejoin his office, in his blog had said that the terrorists and the jehadis were threatening the human rights of the citizens in Jammu and Kashmir.

“They terrorise courts; they kill editors; they kill innocent citizens and they don’t allow any alternate religion to be practised. Who is threatening the human rights of the citizens of Kashmir? It is obvious that it is the terrorists and the jehadis.”

Meanwhile, Maoists don’t allow any development activity in tribal regions, he said. “They kill innocent tribals who don’t agree with them; they destroy public buildings; they kill security personnel and they even charge a parallel tax from helpless citizens.”

He said human rights were at the core of India’s Parliamentary democracy and the Constitution guaranteed these to every citizen. “Our policy has to be ‘save the human rights of every Indian – be it a tribal or a Kashmiri’ from terrorists,” Jaitley had written.

However, he had accused the human rights organisations of being taken over by the ultra-left and said they never spoke about the deprivation of the human rights of the citizens, and “never shed a tear for the indiscriminate killing of the security personnel”.

“These human right organisations are an over-ground face of the underground. In the system that they believe in, there is no place for life, liberty, equality and free speech, election or Parliamentary democracy.”

Filed Under: News & Politics

If men can remarry, why can’t women: Venkaiah

June 23, 2018 by Nasheman

Vice President M. Venkaiah Naidu on Saturday called for a change in mindset towards widows, asking “if a man can remarry, why can’t a woman”?

“There is a problem in the mind organized people, we need to change this mindset,” Naidu said during the celebration of International Widows Day.

He also said that widowhood is sad for both men and women, but women suffer more.

Speaking during an event organised by the Loomba Foundation at the Vigyan Bhawan here, Union Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad echoed the same sentiments.

“The steps taken for the empowerment of widows will not be successful unless it is taken as a mass movement. Without a change in attitude we can not change much,” Prasad said.

The foundation, working for the widows across the world, was started by Lord Raj Loomba CBE in 1997.

Loomba urge ed the Indian government to take steps to improve the condition of widows in the country.

“India has 46 million widows, largest in any country. I urged the Indian government to set up a national commission for widows along side of the National Commission for Women. I also urged the government to include women in the minority section to provide them various assistance,” Loomba said.

Filed Under: News & Politics

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