Nasheman News : Leading private hospital Apollo on Friday offered to treat free injured troopers of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) who survived the terror blast near Awantipora in Kashmir on Thursday.
“We offer to treat the CRPF troopers injured in the terror attack till recovery and rehabilitation at any of our hospitals across the country,” said Apollo Hospitals Chairman Prathap Reddy in a statement here.
Grieving the loss of 45 brave troopers, Reddy hailed the martyrs who laid their lives for the country and offered condolence to their bereaved families.
“We salute the families of the victims who gave the country such brave sons of the soil and for their supreme sacrifice,” added Reddy.
Archives for 2019
Karnataka to give job to CRPF trooper’s widow
Nasheman News : Karnataka will provide a job to the widow of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) trooper H. Guru, who was among those killed in a suicide attack in Jammu and Kashmir’s Pulwama district on Thursday, Chief Minister H.D. Kumaraswamy said on Friday.
“It is a heart-wrenching incident. The state government will provide a job to the widow (Kalavathi) of Guru who is from Mandya district in the state,” Kumaraswamy told reporters.
In a tweet earlier, the Chief Minister said he spoke to Guru’s family members over the telephone and consoled them.
“Their grief is heart-wrenching. We are with them. I have instructed officials to speed up the compensation process,” Kumaraswamy tweeted.
Guru, 33, from Gudigere village in Mandya district, about 100 km from here, belonged to the 82nd Battalion of the CRPF and was posted in Srinagar.
Guru’s family members, including Kalavathi, father Honnaiah, mother Chikka Thayamma and younger brothers Madhu and Anand were inconsolable over his sudden death in the terror attack on the bus in which he was travelling along with other troopers from Jammu to Srinagar.
According to his relatives, Guru was at home on leave last week and left for Jammu and Kashmir on February 11.
Guru joined the CRPF in 2011 and was deployed in Jharkhand as part of the 94th Battalion before being posted in Jammu and Kashmir.
“Though Guru’s mother feared for his life and asked him to quit the job and settle down in the native village, he told her that he was committed to serve the country and not to worry about his welfare,” a family member told the local media in Kannada.
BJP’s state unit President B.S. Yeddyurappa, who also hails from Mandya district, said Guru’s tragic death was painful.
“Guru, who dedicated his life to the nation at a young age, was a role model for the youth of the country. I pray for his soul to rest in peace and give strength to his bereaved family,” Yeddyurappa tweeted in Kannada.
Former External Affairs Minister and senior BJP leader S.M. Krishna, who too hails from Mandya, condemned the savage terror attack on the CRPF convoy in which 45 troopers were killed.
“The imprint of Pakistan’s ISI is visible in the cowardly attack, going by the target chosen and the modus operandi of the terrorists,” Krishna said in a statement.
Regretting that the latest terror attack proved that Pakistan did not learn any lesson from India’s September 2016 surgical strike across the LoC, Krishna said India’s policy must be more muscular and lethal while dealing with the hostile neighbouring country.
“The surgical strike by the Indian Army Commandos ought to have made Pakistan realise the futility of fomenting trouble in Jammu and Kashmir. As it did not, it must be spoken to in the language it understands,” said the former Karnataka Chief Minister.
Noting that Pakistan did not learn any lesson in spite of losing four wars against India in 1948, 1965, 1971 and 1999 (Kargil), Krishna said it would be naive to believe that one surgical strike will discipline Pakistan.
“Repeated military blows on Pakistan’s strategic and commercial interests must be undertaken,” said Krishna.
Condoling Guru’s death, Krishna said the trooper laid down his life to the call of the motherland. “We are all proud of Guru’s sacrifice. I assure his parents that their son’s sacrifice will not go in vain. India will avenge this barbaric killing. I pay my condolence to them and will meet them soon,” added Krishna.
The Status Of Women Has Changed In India
By: Husna Rizwan
Women are not born, but made. What better than India to exemplify this statement by Simone De Beauvoir. With the whole world celebrating International Women’s Day with great pomp & show, it would be only apt to analyse the position & the space Indian women occupy today, and comparing it to the time 6 decades ago when the country had just gained independence. With women participating in nationalist movements, to being pushed into the domestic household space, to their resurgence as super women today, women in our country have seen it all.
There have been innumerable debates about gender in India over the years. Much of it includes women’s positing in society, their education, health, economic position, gender equality etc. What one can conclude from such discussions is that women have always held a certain paradoxical position in our developing country.
While on one hand, India has seen an increased percentage of literacy among women, and women are now entering professional fields, the practices of female infanticide, poor health conditions & lack of education still persisting! Even the patriarchal ideology of home being a woman’s ‘real domain’ & marriage being her ultimate destiny hasn’t changed much. The matrimonial advertisements, demanding girls of the same caste, with fair skin & slim figure, or the much criticised fair & lovely ads, are indicators of slow changing social mores. If one looks at the status of women then & now, one has to look at 2 sides of the same coin; one side which is promising & one side which is bleak.
When our country got its independence, the participation of women nationalists was widely acknowledged. When Indian Constitution was formulated, it granted equal rights to women, considering them legal citizens of the country & as an equal to men in terms of freedom & opportunity. The sex ratio of women at this time was slightly better than what it is today, standing at 945 females per 1000 males. Yet the condition of women screamed a different reality.
They were relegated to household chores & made to submit to male-dominated patriarchal society, as has always been prevalent in our country. Indian women, who fought as equals with men in nationalist struggle, were not given that free public space anymore. They became homemakers & were mainly meant to build a strong home to support their men who were to build the newly independent country. Women were reduced to being 2nd class citizens. The national female literacy rate was alarmingly low (8.6%). The Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) for girls was 24.8% at primary level & 4.6% at upper primary level (in the 11-14 years age group). There existed insoluble social & cultural barriers to education of women & access to organised schooling.
A very few were allowed into the public space, which she was expected to manage on her own, while maintaining her domestic role as a homemaker. In spite of Sharda Act which was passed in 1950’s to raise the marital age limit for girls, child marriage particularly in North India was quite prevalent though average age at marriage for females was increased to 18. Sprawling inequalities persisted in their access to education, health care, physical & financial resources & opportunities in political, social & cultural spheres. It was almost unthinkable for women to have a choice or a say in matters of marriage, career or life. Rather she had no voice at all. The practice of dowry was as common as ever.
And since men were better educated than girls, their demands were even more. The Dowry Prohibition Act was finally passed in 1961, to protect women & promising severe punishment, but the conviction rate of crime against women was & still is very low in India. Because of such inhuman practices which were normalised by our society, the birth of the girl child was considered inauspicious. In villages as well as cities, the girl child was killed either before birth or after it. Even till date, the practice continues. The United Nations Children’s Fund, estimated that up to 50 million girls & women are “missing” from India’s population because of termination of the female foetus or high mortality of girl child due to lack of proper care.
Though a number of constitutional amendments were made for women’s social, economic & political benefits, yet they were never effective to bring in a radical change in situation. Women had only the role of a “good wife” to play & if a woman ventured out to work, she was seen as a bad woman, going against societal norms. Women were expected to cook food & eat only after the men, with whatever meagre amount of food is left. This led to rampant malnutrition among women & an extremely poor health status. Around 500 women were reported to die every day due to pregnancy related problems due to malnutrition & getting married before 18. It was only by 1960’s that a few educated women began to see themselves increasingly change from a mere guardian of home to a legitimate participant in discourse of life. The country saw the 1stundercurrent of female discontent with the system.
With time, a lot has changed since those dark ages of 1950’s for women. Though at some levels like dowry, crimes like rape, sexual harassment at office or public places & molestation, eve-teasing, even after over 60 years of independence women are still exploited, which is the shameful side of our country. Yet one can’t deny that the situation has improved since the earlier times. Women, who now represent 48.2% of the population, are getting access to education & then employment. From 5.4 million girls enrolled at the primary level in 1950-1951 to 61.1 million girls in 2004-2005. At the upper primary level, the enrolment increased from 0.5 million girls to 22.7 million girls.
Dropout rates for girls have fallen by 16.5% between the year 2000 & 2005. Programs like “Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan” & “Saakshar Bharat Mission for Female Literacy” has helped increase literacy rates from less than 10% to more than 50% today. The result of this is that India has world’s largest number of professionally qualified women. In fact India has largest population of working women in the world & has more number of doctors, surgeons, scientists, professors than United States.
Women in India slowly started recognising her true potential. She has started questioning rules laid down for her by society. As a result, she has started breaking barriers & earned a respectable position in the world.
Today Indian women have excelled in each & every field from social work to visiting space station. There is no arena, which remains unconquered by Indian women. Whether it is politics, sports, entertainment, literature, technology everywhere, its women power all along.
Today names like Arundhati Roy, Anita Desai, Kiran Desai, Shobhaa De, Jhumpa Lahiri can put any other writer to shame. In the field of cinema, women like Rekha, Smita Patil, Shabana Aazmi, Vidya Balan & Konkona Sen are such names who don’t play feminised roles, but have asserted themselves over this male-dominated realm. In the field of Politics, from Indira Gandhi to Shiela Dixit, Uma Bharti, Jayalalithaa, Vasundhra Raje & Mamata Banerjee today, women are making their presence felt.Today, modern woman is so deft & self-sufficient that she can be easily called a superwoman, juggling many fronts single-handedly. Women are now fiercely ambitious and are proving their metal not only on home front, but also in their respective professions. Women in Indian are coming up in all spheres of life. They are joining the universities & colleges in large numbers. They are entering into all kinds of professions like engineering, medicine, politics, teaching, etc. A nation’s progress & prosperity can be judged by the way it treats its women folk. There is a slow & steady awareness regarding giving women their dues & not mistreating them, seeing them as objects of possession. Despite progress, the very fact that women, along with being achievers, are also expected to fulfil their roles as wives or mothers, prioritising home against anything else.
This point of view hasn’t changed much. There is still a large section of women who are uneducated & married off before the age of 18. Families are required to supply a chaste daughter to family of her future husband. Also very few women are actually employed in good-paying jobs & hence parents don’t see the point of spending money on girls’ education. Statistics say that close to 245 million Indian women lack the basic capability to read & write, which is a large number. Only 13.9% women are employed in urban sector & 29% in domestic & agriculture sector, where too a majority of women are exploited by men. The sex ratio of India shows that Indian society is still prejudiced against female, and a lot is yet to be achieved in this context.
The path towards total gender empowerment is full of potholes. Over the years, women have made great strides in many areas with notable progress in reducing some gender gaps. Yet realities such as 11,332 women & girls getting trafficked every year & increased practice of dowry, rape & sexual harassment hit hard against all development that has taken place. Thus, if on one hand women are climbing the ladder of success, on the other hand she is mutely suffering violence afflicted on her by her own family members. As compared to the past, women in modern times have achieved a lot but in reality they have to still travel a long way. Women may have left secured domains of their home, but a harsh, cruel, exploitative world awaits them, where women have to prove their talent against the world who see women as merely vassals of producing children. The Indian woman has to make her way through all the socialised prejudices against her, and the men have have to allow & accept the women to be equal participants in the country’s way forward.
A Political Encounter With Prakash Raj
By: Rizwan Asad
The Reel Life Actor Turns A Real Life Politician Prakash Raj needs no special introduction, as he is a very popular multilinguistic actor, producer & director having worked not only in all the South Indian languages namely Kannada, Malyalam, Tamil & Telugu but also in varied other languages like Hindi, Marathi, Bhojpuri, English et al! And now at this age & stage he has said a final good bye to the Indian Cinema industry forever to step into the Political arena to contest for the forthcoming Loksabha elections as an independent candidate. Tune in for his political nuggets in his Garden house on off MG Road.
*So Prakashji you are now all set to contest the forthcoming Loksabha elections as an independent candidate. So what brings you back to Bangalore? *But what made you to take the decision to come back to Bangalore only & contest for the elections? *Sir I was never away from Bangalore as Bangalore is where my real roots are. So you see there is no coming back syndrome as far as Bangalore is concerned! To that my answer once again is that I don’t come, I have been brought & it is always the situation that brings me here. This time I came to observe the political scenario & also to see where our country & its politicians are headed and as compared to that where our voters are headed and whether together they all are forming the correct political scenario or not?
*But why only Bangalore? You could have contested the forthcoming elections from anywhere? *You see I belong to Bangalore & today whatever I am or whatever qualities I have is because of my upbringing & my roots in Bangalore. I have learned my craft here & I have started my career on stage & films as an actor in Kannada films from Bangalore. Actually speaking Bangalore has empowered me, whatever I have achieved today & whatever qualities I have acquired is because of my deeply enmeshed roots in Bangalore. So Bangalore has given me so much that I thought it was payback time. I want to do something for my Bangalorean people. Hence I decided to restart my independent political journey from Bangalore all over again. I also realized that I should be the voice of the Bangaloreans in particular & of the entire India in general & this way I can take their demands to the parliament on a State & National level too. Now it remains to be seen if I can succeed in my mission & if the people of Bangalore will accept me as their independent leader.
*So what do you think of the current political scenario? * I feel that the current political scenario is more in a denial mode. Nobody, I mean none of the parties are showing the correct picture of Bangalore’s varied culture, its varied languages thereby it effects the current & the correct representation in the constitution. So my advice to them is to get their act together, one which would help them to make the proper inclusion of the massaes vote bank in order to have their right representation in the constitution.
*Don’t you think today’s politics constitutes more of a disordered chaos!!!
*Yes! You are right we find a lot of chaos everywhere & especially in all the corners of the political arena. What we need today is that people should strive to keep alive the spirit of humanity by understanding the right nuances of politics as befitting to the human spirit, those politicians who do not follow these rules needless to say that they end up in a clueless chaos.
*I am sure many political parties may have invited you to contest the elections. Yet you decided to go independent. Why? *Yeah many political parties which are on the verge of decline dangle baits in your way and most of them just strive to hang on to the invited people to survive in the cesspool of politics but thankfully I am not one of those who will bite the bait. So I thought it is better to contest the election as an independent candidate.
*How different is today’s politics as compared to the earlier times? *Of course there is a vast difference in today’s politics as earlier they were committed to their cause of the betterment of the country & its people but today everyone knows what’s going on so the less spoken about the current situation the better.
*So where have all those committed politician gone?
*No one knows. So what do you want me to do should I go & find them?
*Most of the politicians & even the voters are illiterate so do you think that something should be done in this regard?
*You tell me what can be done in this regard? The system definitely has to be changed. But who will bell the cat?
*Do you think that the voters can be blamed as most of them, especially the hi-fi people do not step out of their apartments or bungalows & do not even come out to exercise their power of vote?
*Nothing can be done as long as the so called hi-fi voters themselves realize their follies & understand what change they can bring about with their power of vote. They should realize about their duties towards their country. Nowadays the illiterate people in distant villagers are also becoming conscious about their duties & even making their brethren realize about their duties & responsibilities towards their country.
*Lastly how do you think the system can be changed for a better leader who can at least think of everyone’s well-being?
*Simple! Let the voter’s analyze the situation & and choose the right candidate mind you not the party. Don’t get tempted by dangling baits & false promises.
TN CM announces Rs 20 lakh each to kin of two CRPF troopers
Nasheman News : Tamil Nadu Chief Minister K. Palanisami on Friday condoled the death of 45 CRPF troopers in a terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir and announced a solatium of Rs 20 lakh each to the families of two troopers from the state who died.
He expressed his grief at the death of the two troopers from Tamil Nadu – G. Subramanian and C. Sivachandran – in the Thursday suicide bombing in Pulwama district.
Sidhu talks of dialogue with Pakistan even after Pulwama attack
Nasheman News : While a suicide attack which killed 45 CRPF troopers evoked widespread condemnation and calls for action against Pakistan, Punjab cabinet Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu sounded a discordant note on Friday saying the dialogue with Islamabad should continue.
Sidhu, who takes every opportunity to harp on his friendship with Pakistan Prime Minister and former cricketer Imran Khan, said: “Whereever wars are fought and such things (Pulwama type attack) happen, dialogue also continues simultaneously. There is a need to find a permanent solution to (issues between India and Pakistan).
“Such people (terrorists) have no religion, no country and no caste. When a snake bites, its anti-dote is also snake poison,” Sidhu said, justifying his take on the matter regarding dialogue between the two nuclear neighbours.
Sidhu condemned the Pulwama terror attack on the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) convoy on Thursday which killed 45 troopers but added that the entire nation (Pakistan) could not be blamed for the actions of a handful people.
“This (attack) should be condemned by all. For a handful people, you cannot blame an entire nation. Those behind the attack must be punished,” Sidhu said.
Pulwama attack: India summons Pakistan High Commissioner
Nasheman News :India on Friday summoned Pakistan High Commissioner Sohail Mahmood and lodged a strong protest over the Pulwama terror attack that claimed the lives of 45 CRPF troopers in Jammu and Kashmir.
Sources in the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said Foreign Secretary Vijay Keshav Gokhale summoned Mahmood to the MEA at 2 p.m. and issued a “very strong demarche” in connection with the terror attack on Thursday that also left 38 troopers injured.
Gokhale conveyed that Pakistan must take immediate and verifiable action against the Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM), which claimed responsibility immediately after the attack, and that it must immediately stop any groups or individuals associated with terrorism and operating from Pakistani territory.
He also rejected the statement made by the Pakistan Foreign Ministry denying any involvement in the suicide attack, that has been called the worst-ever terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir since militancy began there in 1989.
The JeM, a Pakistan-based outfit, claimed responsibility for the attack in which a suicide bomber on Thursday rammed his SUV packed with explosives into a Central Reserve Police Force bus that was part of a large convoy on the Jammu-Srinagar highway around 3.15 p.m., killing 45 troopers and leaving the security establishment stunned.
Hacker who stole over 600 mn account details strikes again
Nasheman News : A hacker who stole close to 620 million user records from 16 websites has struck again, this time breaking into 127 million more records from eight more websites.
According to a TechCrunch report late on Thursday, the hacker now has 18 million user records from travel booking site Ixigo and 40 million from live-video streaming site YouNow.
“Houzz, which recently disclosed a data breach, is listed with 57 million records stolen and Ge.tt had 1.8 million accounts stolen,” said the report.
According to the hacker’s listings, Ixigo used an outdated “MD5” hashing algorithm to scramble passwords, which these days is easy to unscramble.
“YouNow doesn’t store passwords,” a spokesperson was quoted as saying.
Earlier, the same hacker claimed he had user records from several major sites like more than 151 million records from MyFitnessPal and 25 million records from Animoto.
It has been claimed that databases, which are aimed at making “life easier” for hackers, can be purchased from the Dream Market cyber-souk, located in the Tor network, for less than $20,000 in bitcoin.
The stolen information mainly includes account holders’ names, email addresses and passwords, according to the report that appeared this week.
The price appears to be relatively cheap because the information is targeted at spammers and credential stuffers who could use the information to also get access to other sites for which the users use the same usernames and passwords.
While some of these websites – particularly MyHeritage, MyFitnessPal and Animoto – warned their customers last year that they had been compromised, several others have started notifying users about the hacks.
Sindhu makes winning start at badminton nationals
Nasheman News : Two-time champion P.V. Sindhu began her quest for a third title with a win at the Yonex-Sunrise 83rd Senior National Badminton Championships here on Thursday.
The top seed beat Nagpur’s rising star Malvika Bansod 21-11, 21-13 to progress into the quarter-finals.
Harsheel Dani, meanwhile, caused the upset of the day by showing the door to the fourth seed and last edition’s semi-finalist Subhankar Dey 21-15, 21-17 in 43 minutes.
Eighty three world ranking spots separate the 22-year-old and Dey but that hardly mattered as the 131st ranked Dani produced a barrage of attacking shots to knock out the World No.48 Dey.
In one of the most-awaited men’s doubles matches of the day, second seeds Chirag Shetty and Pranaav Jerry Chopra edged veterans V Diju and Rupesh Kumar KT 21-8, 18-21, 22-20 in a clash of generations to enter the semi-finals.
Dhruv Kapila and Krishna Prasad Garaga, one of the most promising men’s doubles pairs, beat Deep Rambhiya and Pratik Ranade 21-17, 21-14 to set up a meeting with the top seeds Arjun MR and Shlok Ramchandran, who took care of Saurabh Sharma and Rohan Kapoor 21-11, 21-18.
Kuhoo Garg and Anoushka Parikh notched up a commanding 21-10, 21-13 victory over Agna Anto and Sneha Santhilal in women’s doubles. Manu Attri and Maneesha K, meanwhile, knocked out the second seeds Saurabh Sharma and Anoushka Parikh 21-10, 21-16 to enter the mixed doubles semi-finals.
Sindhu overcame a slow start to find her rhythm. After lagging behind the Khelo India Games runner-up 0-4, the World No. 6 settled into the match and stormed ahead to 11-7. A flurry of unforced errors under pressure from Bansod absolutely did not help the youngster as the first game went to her highly accomplished opponent.
Bansod could not do much damage to Sindhu in the second game too. Her errors put the Rio Olympic silver medallist at an 11-4 advantage before the 2011 and 2013 champion wrapped up the match to set up a quarter-final showdown with Riya Mookerjee, a 21-11, 17-21, 21-18 winner over Kanika Kanwal.
The Round of 16 singles and the quarter-final matches in doubles started from Thursday on completion of the preliminaries on Day 2 of the Nationals. The top eight singles seeds and the top four doubles seeds had been exempted from playing until the pre-quarters and the quarters respectively.
In the other Round of 16 singles clashes, Asian junior champion Lakshya Sen hardly broke sweat in his 21-11, 21-8 demolition of Ansal Yadav. Top seed and 2015 champion Sameer Verma, meanwhile, had to retire hurt after winning the first game 21-16 and trailing 1-8 against Aryamann Tandon.
Sourabh Verma, a two-time winner, faced no hassles in his 21-8, 21-15 win over Kartik Jindal. Bodhit Joshi and Kaushal Dharmamer both had to work hard for three games before advancing to the last eight.
In women’s singles, Assam’s wonder kid Ashmita Chaliha, seeded fourth at this tournament, needed three games to prevail over Vaidehi Choudhari 21-13, 15-21, 21-12. Third seed Shriyanshi Pardeshi blew away Deepshikha Singh 21-3, 21-7 while junior national champion Aakarshi Kashyap stunned former winner Rituparna Das 21-18, 21-12.
Maharashtra girl Neha Pandit continued her heroics with a 21-14, 21-13 victory over 2018 Tata Open quarter-finalist Anura Prabhudesai and her statemate Vaishnavi Bhale got the better of Sai Uttejitha Rao Chukka 21-13, 21-15.
While the top-seeded doubles teams in each section all safely made it to the semi-finals, Manu Attri and K. Maneesha knocked out second seeds Saurabh Sharma and Anoushka Parikh 21-10, 21-16 in mixed doubles.
Curfew in Jammu as protests turn violent
Nasheman News : Authorities on Friday imposed curfew in Jammu city after mobs protesting against the terrorist strike in the Kashmir Valley turned violent, torching some vehicles and damaging several others.
District Magistrate Ramesh Kumar said the curfew had been clamped to maintain law and order.
Police said the violence began in the city’s Gujjar Nagar area.
Police used tear smoke and batons to bring the situation under control after which curfew was imposed, initially in Gujjar Nagar, Talab Khatikan, Janipur, Bakshi Nagar, Chenni Heemat, Bus Stand and some other places in old city area and later extended to entire Jammu.
Tension spread to other “sensitive areas” of the city as news about the violence in Gujjar Nagar spread.
“People are advised to maintain calm and not play into the hands of anti-social elements who want to exploit the situation for their nefarious objectives,” a police officer said.
One of the 45 CRPF soldiers killed in Thursday’s suicide bombing in Pulwama was identified as Naseer Ahmad of Rajouri district in the state.
A protest shutdown was called on Friday by the Jammu Chamber of Commerce and Industry (JCCI).
Jammu transporters association, the local Bar association and the National Conference have extended support to the shutdown.
Rakesh Gupta, President of JCCI, an influential body of local traders and industrialists, told IANS: “We condemn the brutal attack and stand in solidarity with the families who have lost their dear ones in this attack.
“I appeal to the people belonging to different sections of the society to maintain the traditional harmony and brotherhood for which Jammu has been known ever since the fires of violence spread in the (Kashmir) Valley.”
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