Mahoba, May 24 : After a woman set herself and two children ablaze at home, she and one of her sons were killed while another minor sustained serious burn injuries, police said on Friday.
Anguished over the unfortunate incident, the woman’s husband also committed suicide by jumping in front of a train today morning.
Deputy Superintendent of Police Jatashankar Rao here said that Lalita Devi (28), wife of Bhaiyadeen Prajapti (32), a resident of Subhash Nagar in the Kabrai town, set herself on fire along with her two children Ritik (5) and Rohan (3), after pouring kerosene at her home on Thursday.
Lalita and Rohan succumbed to serious burn injuries while Ritik was critically burnt and is currently undergoing treatment at a hospital.
Mr Rao said that anguished over the demise of his wife and son, Bhaiyadeen committed suicide at the Banda-Mahoba rail division after jumping in front of a train.
The DSP said that Bhaiyadeen was a truck driver and the reason behind the woman taking such a drastic step has not yet been ascertained.
Further investigation is underway.
M.S. Sathyu and Shama Zaidi in conversation with Teesta Setalvad
Films like Garm Hawa, with a unique perspective on Partition are of particular relevance today, given the current Indian regime that is characterized by a communal and fundamentalist outlook, noted film director MS Sathyu told Teesta Setalvad in this week’s special interview.
The Great War
The Great War is a video documentary series on YouTube that covers World War I. The series will air each week over the next four years with each 6-10 minute episode covering a week’s worth of the war 100 years after it happened.
Education & teaching in an de-intellectualised and obedient society – Interview with Apoorvanand
Since the new government has come to power, there are continuous attacks on education in order to saffronize it. The history of the national movement is being re-written to manufacture an RSS role, which did not exist in the struggles against British rule. Dinanath Batra’s books, already a part of the Gujarat curriculum, are sought now to be introduced at the national level. He is same Dinanath Batra, from whose books, Modi drew “inspiration” to prove that in Mahabharata times, India had discovered genetic engineering and plastic surgery! Subramanian Swami wants book burning, starting with books of secular historians like Romila Thapar. RSS leaders have recently met HRD Minister Smriti Irani to discuss revision of text books. Education is being used as a tool to create communal divide.
Newsclick interviews Professor Apoorvanand of Delhi University on this communal attack on Indian history and education.
RSS has a bitter and narrow vision of our tradition: Mahesh Bhatt in conversation with Teesta Setalvad
Don’t narrow your band width to a bitter and hate ridden version of Hinduism as appropriated by the RSS, Mahesh Bhatt, award winning film maker exhorts the young Indian film maker in this Special Interview with Teesta Setalvad on Communalism Combat and Hillele TV; and use the creative medium to express dissent.
Nobel Peace Prize for an Indian and Pakistani does have to do with global politics: Arundhati Roy
On the Lauran Flanders show, Arundhati Roy was asked her views on the Nobel peace prize:
Arundhati Roy:
“Look, it’s a difficult thing to talk about because Malala is a brave girl and I think she has now started speaking out against US invasions and bombings that are going on.
“But certainly… as an individual, it is very difficult to resist great powers trying to co-opt you and, trying to use you in certain ways, and she’s only a kid, you know, and she cannot be faulted at all for what she did, but certainly the great game is going on, you know.
“And, of course, the idea of an Indian and a Pakistani being given…sharing the Nobel prize does have to do with global politics and it does have to do with the fact that until the 1990s, Pakistan and America were allies. Now, with all the trouble in Pakistan, the US is trying to step back from that marsh and look for firmer ground, in India.
“So we are at the receiving end of the kiss of death, if you like, and so both the begums now, Pakistan and India, have to be in the sheikh’s harem. You know, they have to be both be…
“I am not…this should not be taken as if I am criticising the individuals at all, but when the great game is at play, then they pick out people…all of us, I am aware of… at least you have to be aware of it…”
Where is the Internet?
Billions of people around the world use the Internet every day, but it’s likely few outside of the IT industry could give a definitive answer to the question, “Where is the Internet?” It’s a query that many may never even enter the consideration of most Internet users, beyond researching a hosting provider or vague notions of “cyberspace” or memories of AOL floppies from the ’90s.
Yet despite its ephemeral nature, the Internet does indeed have a physical home—one that encircles the globe. Spread across almost 75 million interconnected servers, the network we now call the Internet connects more than five billion (with some estimates hovering closer to ten billion) computers, smartphones, and other devices. That’s a far cry from its ancestor, the ARPANET project of the 1960s, which began as a 2.4 kbps connection between two enormous university computers.
Today, the connections that power the backbone of the Internet push data at close to the speed of light along more than half a million miles of undersea cable. That’s enough cable to circle the Earth more than 22 times, or to reach from Earth to the moon—and back again. Even with such enormous power and reach, however, experts from the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) predict only 40% of the total population of Earth will be online by the end of 2013. That number will likely climb much higher as satellite-based Internet technology becomes more practical and coverage expands to areas currently inaccessible by traditional landlines.
Whether under the sea, beaming from a satellite, or flying through the air on a neighbor’s WiFi, the connections and data that make up the Internet touch nearly every aspect of our lives. This titanic—and largely invisible—infrastructure makes much of modern life possible (or at least more convenient). As the world grows increasingly connected, the answer to the question “Where is the Internet?” may eventually become a simple, “Everywhere.”
Politics of Saffron Brigade
The victory of Narendra Modi led BJP government has brought with it a flurry of almost daily assaults of communal violence, inflammatory speeches and statements. Prime Minister Modi, whose government was ushered in on the promise of ‘good days’, has maintained complete silence on these issues.
Nakul Singh Sawhney from Newsclick speaks to Subhash Gatade about the growing instances of communal assaults to analyse the politics of both majority and minority communalism and why secular forces have failed to curb them.