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Centre asks states to honour SHGs supporting cleanliness drive

PTI |

The Centre plans to reward women self-help groups for their contribution towards the Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM)on the International Women's Day celebrated on March 8.

As part of the exercise, the Union Urban Development Ministry has asked the state governments to organise events to felicitate such groups under SBM- Urban.

In a letter to the states' Swachh Bharat Mission directors and municipal commissioners recently, the Ministry said the government aims to integrate women SHGs, especially in slums, in effective implementation of the initiative.

"We request you to organise public felicitation ceremonies in your respective states and cities to appreciate and reward women self-help groups who have been doing commendable work on swachhata (cleanliness) related issues," Praveen Prakash, Joint Secretary in the ministry, said.

The funds for organising such functions would be met from the mission's Information, Education and Communication (IEC) budget.

Centre asks states to honour SHGs supporting cleanliness drive

PTI |

The Centre plans to reward women self-help groups for their contribution towards the Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM)on the International Women's Day celebrated on March 8.

As part of the exercise, the Union Urban Development Ministry has asked the state governments to organise events to felicitate such groups under SBM- Urban.

In a letter to the states' Swachh Bharat Mission directors and municipal commissioners recently, the Ministry said the government aims to integrate women SHGs, especially in slums, in effective implementation of the initiative.

"We request you to organise public felicitation ceremonies in your respective states and cities to appreciate and reward women self-help groups who have been doing commendable work on swachhata (cleanliness) related issues," Praveen Prakash, Joint Secretary in the ministry, said.

The funds for organising such functions would be met from the mission's Information, Education and Communication (IEC) budget.

Trump Reacts to Schwarzenegger’s exit from Celebrity Apprentice

PTI | Los Angeles |

US President Donald Trump fired back at Arnold Schwarzenegger, who claims to have quit "The Celebrity Apprentice", saying the actor was sacked from the show because of his "pathetic" ratings.

"Arnold Schwarzenegger isn't voluntarily leaving the Apprentice, he was fired by his bad (pathetic) ratings, not by me. Sad end to great show," Trump tweeted.

Schwarzenegger quickly wrote, "You should think about hiring a new joke writer and a fact checker." 

Trump has been blaming Schwarzenegger for "The Apprentice" declining ratings.

 

Trump Reacts to Schwarzenegger’s exit from Celebrity Apprentice

PTI | Los Angeles |

US President Donald Trump fired back at Arnold Schwarzenegger, who claims to have quit "The Celebrity Apprentice", saying the actor was sacked from the show because of his "pathetic" ratings.

"Arnold Schwarzenegger isn't voluntarily leaving the Apprentice, he was fired by his bad (pathetic) ratings, not by me. Sad end to great show," Trump tweeted.

Schwarzenegger quickly wrote, "You should think about hiring a new joke writer and a fact checker." 

Trump has been blaming Schwarzenegger for "The Apprentice" declining ratings.

 

DU drops ‘special chance’ provision for students

PTI |

The Delhi University has decided to do away with the "special chance" provision for students who could not complete their degrees within stipulated time.

The "special chance" provision allowed students who left their studies midway to appear for pending exams even years later if they could justify their absence.

The Executive Council (EC), the supreme decision-making body of the university, last week decided to scrap the provision saying the students must complete their degrees on time.

"Students are here to study. Why can't they complete their degrees on time?" an EC member asked.

He said in case of any "reasonable" issue forcing students to take a break- like health reasons or marriage- they already get a 'span time' to complete it.

"There is no need for any chance beyond that," he said.

The 'span time' provision allows students extra time to complete their degrees.

Thus, as per DU norms, undergraduate students need to finish their degrees inside six years while post-graduate degrees must do it inside four years from the date of enrolment.

The Council said there were logistical issues too as the examination branch was finding it difficult to maintain the records for longer period.

"It is not only unprofessional but also puts undue pressure on the examination office," the member said.

The provision, which has been a matter of debate in the varsity for over a decade, was done away with in 2012, but was brought back following protests from students.

Following the 2012 withdrawal of the scheme, a group of 32 students had approached the Delhi High Court requesting they be allowed to avail it.

The court had then directed the DU to consider their requests.

DU drops ‘special chance’ provision for students

PTI |

The Delhi University has decided to do away with the "special chance" provision for students who could not complete their degrees within stipulated time.

The "special chance" provision allowed students who left their studies midway to appear for pending exams even years later if they could justify their absence.

The Executive Council (EC), the supreme decision-making body of the university, last week decided to scrap the provision saying the students must complete their degrees on time.

"Students are here to study. Why can't they complete their degrees on time?" an EC member asked.

He said in case of any "reasonable" issue forcing students to take a break- like health reasons or marriage- they already get a 'span time' to complete it.

"There is no need for any chance beyond that," he said.

The 'span time' provision allows students extra time to complete their degrees.

Thus, as per DU norms, undergraduate students need to finish their degrees inside six years while post-graduate degrees must do it inside four years from the date of enrolment.

The Council said there were logistical issues too as the examination branch was finding it difficult to maintain the records for longer period.

"It is not only unprofessional but also puts undue pressure on the examination office," the member said.

The provision, which has been a matter of debate in the varsity for over a decade, was done away with in 2012, but was brought back following protests from students.

Following the 2012 withdrawal of the scheme, a group of 32 students had approached the Delhi High Court requesting they be allowed to avail it.

The court had then directed the DU to consider their requests.

Messi makes Barca believe, Benzema leads Madrid

Lionel Messi dazzled with two goals and two assists as Barcelona thrashed Celta Vigo 5-0 in their first game since coach Luis Enrique announced he will leave at the end of the season

PTI |

Lionel Messi dazzled with two goals and two assists as Barcelona thrashed Celta Vigo 5-0 in their first game since coach Luis Enrique announced he will leave at the end of the season.

Real Madrid remain just one point behind Barca at the top of La Liga and with a game in hand as Karim Benzema scored twice in the absence of Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale in a 4-1 win at Eibar.

An inspired performance by Messi on Saturday raised Barca hopes of a miraculous Champions League fightback from 4-0 down against Paris Saint-Germain next Wednesday.

And the champions showed no ill effects from Enrique's pending departure in arguably their best performance of the season.

Messi opened the scoring in sensational style on 24 minutes as he turned just inside the Celta half before skipping past a host of helpless defenders and stroking the ball home from the edge of the area.

However, the finish for Barca's second was equally as majestic as Messi's pass was dinked over Sergio Alvarez from close range by Neymar.

The hosts' dominance was rewarded with a third just before the hour mark, although there was more than a touch of fortune about it as Ivan Rakitic was clearly offside when he pounced on Rafinha's layoff.

Messi was the provider once more for the fourth as his low cross was turned home by Samuel Umtiti for his first Barca goal.

And the five-time world player of the year produced another individual effort to end the scoring as it started as he cut in from the right before firing the ball inside Alvarez's near post.

Messi makes Barca believe, Benzema leads Madrid

Lionel Messi dazzled with two goals and two assists as Barcelona thrashed Celta Vigo 5-0 in their first game since coach Luis Enrique announced he will leave at the end of the season

PTI |

Lionel Messi dazzled with two goals and two assists as Barcelona thrashed Celta Vigo 5-0 in their first game since coach Luis Enrique announced he will leave at the end of the season.

Real Madrid remain just one point behind Barca at the top of La Liga and with a game in hand as Karim Benzema scored twice in the absence of Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale in a 4-1 win at Eibar.

An inspired performance by Messi on Saturday raised Barca hopes of a miraculous Champions League fightback from 4-0 down against Paris Saint-Germain next Wednesday.

And the champions showed no ill effects from Enrique's pending departure in arguably their best performance of the season.

Messi opened the scoring in sensational style on 24 minutes as he turned just inside the Celta half before skipping past a host of helpless defenders and stroking the ball home from the edge of the area.

However, the finish for Barca's second was equally as majestic as Messi's pass was dinked over Sergio Alvarez from close range by Neymar.

The hosts' dominance was rewarded with a third just before the hour mark, although there was more than a touch of fortune about it as Ivan Rakitic was clearly offside when he pounced on Rafinha's layoff.

Messi was the provider once more for the fourth as his low cross was turned home by Samuel Umtiti for his first Barca goal.

And the five-time world player of the year produced another individual effort to end the scoring as it started as he cut in from the right before firing the ball inside Alvarez's near post.

Karan Johar welcomes twins via surrogacy

PTI | Mumbai |

Karan Johar has become a single father of twins – a baby boy and girl – who were born through surrogacy and the filmmaker says he is "enormously blessed" to be a parent.

Johar, 44, has named his daughter Roohi and his son Yash, after his late father Yash Johar.

"I am ecstatic to share with you all the two most wonderful additions to my life, my children and lifelines; Roohi and Yash. I feel enormously blessed to be a parent to these pieces of my heart who were welcomed into this world with the help of the marvels of medical science," Johar said in a statement.

The "Ae Dil Hai Mushkil" filmmaker says it was an emotional but well thought out decision which he has taken considering all the responsibilities and duties that come with being a parent.

"In order to arrive at this decision, I have prepared myself mentally, physically, emotionally and logistically to ensure that my children get all the unconditional love, care and attention from me and mine. I have submitted to the fact that my children are my world and priority." 

Johar says his work, travels and social commitments will have to take a back seat after the arrival of his kids and he is prepared for that.

"By the grace of God, I have the most caring and supportive mother who will be an integral part in the up-bringing of her grandchildren and of course, friends who are family," he says.

Thanking the surrogate, the filmmaker says he is eternally grateful to her as she has fulfilled his "lifelong dream and provided a warm, loving and nurturing environment to my children before bringing them into this world." 

"She will always remain in my prayers. Finally, a big thank you to Dr Jatin Shah for his guidance and support and for being like a family member through this wonderful and exciting journey," he concludes.

Earlier, Johar, in his autobiography, "An Unsuitable Boy", had expressed a desire to adopt or have a surrogate child.

Last year, actor Tusshar Kapoor welcomed a baby boy, who was born through in vitro fertilization (IVF) and surrogacy.

Johar's friend, superstar Shah Rukh Khan's third child, AbRam, was also born via a surrogate in 2013.

Karan Johar welcomes twins via surrogacy

PTI | Mumbai |

Karan Johar has become a single father of twins – a baby boy and girl – who were born through surrogacy and the filmmaker says he is "enormously blessed" to be a parent.

Johar, 44, has named his daughter Roohi and his son Yash, after his late father Yash Johar.

"I am ecstatic to share with you all the two most wonderful additions to my life, my children and lifelines; Roohi and Yash. I feel enormously blessed to be a parent to these pieces of my heart who were welcomed into this world with the help of the marvels of medical science," Johar said in a statement.

The "Ae Dil Hai Mushkil" filmmaker says it was an emotional but well thought out decision which he has taken considering all the responsibilities and duties that come with being a parent.

"In order to arrive at this decision, I have prepared myself mentally, physically, emotionally and logistically to ensure that my children get all the unconditional love, care and attention from me and mine. I have submitted to the fact that my children are my world and priority." 

Johar says his work, travels and social commitments will have to take a back seat after the arrival of his kids and he is prepared for that.

"By the grace of God, I have the most caring and supportive mother who will be an integral part in the up-bringing of her grandchildren and of course, friends who are family," he says.

Thanking the surrogate, the filmmaker says he is eternally grateful to her as she has fulfilled his "lifelong dream and provided a warm, loving and nurturing environment to my children before bringing them into this world." 

"She will always remain in my prayers. Finally, a big thank you to Dr Jatin Shah for his guidance and support and for being like a family member through this wonderful and exciting journey," he concludes.

Earlier, Johar, in his autobiography, "An Unsuitable Boy", had expressed a desire to adopt or have a surrogate child.

Last year, actor Tusshar Kapoor welcomed a baby boy, who was born through in vitro fertilization (IVF) and surrogacy.

Johar's friend, superstar Shah Rukh Khan's third child, AbRam, was also born via a surrogate in 2013.

Jubilee Bridge to be re-assembled in open air museum

PTI |

Railways will preserve a portion of the 19th century-era Jubilee Bridge over the Hooghly river in a specially-designed open air museum, in what is billed as a first-of-its-kind conservation exercise in the country.

Decommissioned since April 2016, the rail bridge in Kolkata will be dismantled and a significant section of it will be re-assembled at the open air museum for public display as well as for educating engineering students.

Opened for traffic on February 16, 1885, the Jubilee Bridge, one of the oldest bridges in the country, is an engineering marvel with a riveted cantilever truss structure and fitted with unique cast iron pendulum bearings.

While it may not be possible to preserve the whole bridge due to river navigational channel issues, relocation of at least part of it to an open air museum is worth considering for preservation, said a senior Railway Ministry official responsible for rail heritage preservation.

Eastern Railway has been instructed to identify a suitable place near Kolkata to develop the museum in Kolkata.

This will be the first such museum, the official said.

According to the plan, one span/girder of this iconic bridge along with bridge plates and other unique items like pendulum bearings will be mounted in the museum.

Creation of the museum is part of an ongoing exercise being undertaken by the Railways to preserve and showcase rail heritage properties including bridges, locomotives, buildings across the country.

So far about 100 buildings, bridges and structures have already been identified by the Railways as heritage assets.

The Railways is creating a digital repository for all rail heritage structures including bridges and buildings.

The Jubilee Bridge was opened in the golden jubilee year of the reign of Queen Victoria. After serving more than a century, the Jubilee Bridge connecting Naihati and Bandel station has been decommissioned in April 2016.

Jubilee Bridge to be re-assembled in open air museum

PTI |

Railways will preserve a portion of the 19th century-era Jubilee Bridge over the Hooghly river in a specially-designed open air museum, in what is billed as a first-of-its-kind conservation exercise in the country.

Decommissioned since April 2016, the rail bridge in Kolkata will be dismantled and a significant section of it will be re-assembled at the open air museum for public display as well as for educating engineering students.

Opened for traffic on February 16, 1885, the Jubilee Bridge, one of the oldest bridges in the country, is an engineering marvel with a riveted cantilever truss structure and fitted with unique cast iron pendulum bearings.

While it may not be possible to preserve the whole bridge due to river navigational channel issues, relocation of at least part of it to an open air museum is worth considering for preservation, said a senior Railway Ministry official responsible for rail heritage preservation.

Eastern Railway has been instructed to identify a suitable place near Kolkata to develop the museum in Kolkata.

This will be the first such museum, the official said.

According to the plan, one span/girder of this iconic bridge along with bridge plates and other unique items like pendulum bearings will be mounted in the museum.

Creation of the museum is part of an ongoing exercise being undertaken by the Railways to preserve and showcase rail heritage properties including bridges, locomotives, buildings across the country.

So far about 100 buildings, bridges and structures have already been identified by the Railways as heritage assets.

The Railways is creating a digital repository for all rail heritage structures including bridges and buildings.

The Jubilee Bridge was opened in the golden jubilee year of the reign of Queen Victoria. After serving more than a century, the Jubilee Bridge connecting Naihati and Bandel station has been decommissioned in April 2016.

Fierce gunfight in Jammu-Kashmir; one policeman killed

SNS | New Delhi/ Srinagar |

One policeman was killed and three other security personnel were injured on Sunday in a gunfight in Kashmir's Tral town.

The injured included an Army Major, according to police sources.

The gunfight broke out late Saturday in Tral, 10 km from Srinagar after security forces cordoned off a house where around five top Hizbul Mujahideen militants were holed up, the sources said.

Special forces of the Army were deployed to carry out a combing operation in the area, as protesters gathered at the spot. Curfew has been imposed in this area, the sources added. Hizbul Mujahideen's Burhan Wani belong to the area.

(With inputs from agencies)

UP man arrested for threatening Mahesh Bhatt sent to police custody

PTI | Mumbai |

The 26-year-old man, who was arrested from Lucknow for allegedly trying to extort money from Bollywood filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt, has been sent to police custody till March 10 by a local court.

Sandeep Sahoo had allegedly called Bhatt many times, introducing himself as gangster Babloo Shrivastav, alleged former aide of Dawood Ibrahim, and demanded Rs 50 lakh from him.

He threatened to kill Bhatt, his wife Soni Razdan and their daughter Alia Bhatt if he did not meet his demand, police said.

After Bhatt filed a complaint, police traced the caller's whereabouts and informed the Special Task Force of Uttar Pradesh Police which arrested Sahoo from Lucknow.

He was brought to the city and produced before a court on Saturday which remanded him to police custody till March 10, said Senior Inspector Vinayak Vast of the Anti-Extortion Cell of Mumbai Crime Branch.

Sahoo allegedly told the police during interrogation that he had visited Mumbai sometime ago and tried to find work in Bollywood. He had sent WhatsApp messages to Shah Rukh Khan, Akshay Kumar and a few others seeking help, he told police.

Sikh man shot in US, told to ‘go back’ to country

PTI | New York |

A 39-year-old Sikh man in the US has been shot and wounded outside his home by a partially- masked gunman who shouted "go back to your own country", in a suspected hate crime incident that comes just days after an Indian engineer was killed in Kansas.

The Sikh man, identified as US national Deep Rai by Indian officials in New Delhi, was working on his vehicle outside his home in Kent, Washington, on Friday when he was approached by a stranger, who walked up to his driveway.

Kent police said an argument broke out between the two men, with Rai saying the suspect made statements to the effect of "go back to your own country". The unidentified man then shot him in the arm.

The victim described the shooter as a six-foot-tall white man, wearing a mask covering the lower half of his face. Kent police are looking for the gunman.

Kent Police Chief Ken Thomas said while the Sikh man sustained "non life-threatening injuries", they are treating this as a "very serious incident".

Rai is able to talk, an Indian government official said.

The official said the government was ready to offer all possible assistance to the wounded man.

Authorities are investigating the shooting as a suspected hate crime, according to the Seattle Times.

Consulate General of India in San Francisco is in touch with local authorities who are ascertaining the nature of the crime, the Indian official said.

Kent police have launched an investigation into the case and reached out to the FBI and other law enforcement agencies.

"We're early on in our investigation," Thomas said.

Kent Police Commander Jarod Kasner said the incident is getting attention from the Sikh community and others.

"With recent unrest and concern throughout the nation this can get people emotionally involved, especially when (the crime) is directed at a person for how they live, how they look," Kasner said.

The incident is the latest in a series of troubling cases where members of the Indian community have been targeted in apparent hate crimes.

It comes close on the heels of the tragic hate crime shooting in Kansas last month in which 32-year-old Indian engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla was killed when 51-year-old US Navy veteran Adam Purinton opened fire at him and his friend Alok Madasani, yelling "get out of my country".

Earlier this week, Indian-origin convenience store owner Harnish Patel, 43, of Lancaster in South Carolina was found dead of gun shot wounds in his yard. However, police said in Patel's killing his Indian ethnicity does not appear to be a factor.

Jasmit Singh, a leader of the Sikh community in Renton, said he had been told that the Sikh man injured in Friday's incident has been released from hospital.

He said the victim and his family are "very shaken up".
 

Court orders Chennai school headmistress to uproot trees in 2400 sqft

PTI | Chennai |

The Madras High Court bench here has ordered a headmistress of a government school to uproot prosopis juliflora trees in 2,400 sqft as a punishment for instigating a girl student to file a false sexual harassment complaint against three teachers.

Prema, Headmistress of SSAM Government Higher Secondary School in Ramanathapuram district, to wreak vengeance on the three teachers for sending representations to authorities about her poor quality of teaching, instigated the girl to file a false complaint against them.

The teachers, who were transferred based on the complaint of the student, sought the high court's direction to set aside the transfer orders.

Justice S Vaidhyanthan, after holding in-camera proceedings, found that with ulterior motive, the headmistress instigated the girl to lodge complaints against the teachers resulting in their transfer.

"The job of a teacher was equivalent to that of a sculptor, who shapes a stone into a a beautiful sculpture. Her duty is to shape the students as good citizens. Because of involvement of reckless and unprincipled reprobate like the headmistress, the teachers lost their reputation in the society."

He said that transferring skilled teachers on false charges was detrimental to students and the headmistress should remove prosopis juliflora trees in a 2,400 sqft area as a punishment and she should be transferred to a far off place.

Desert cherry

Emma Thomson |

Sudan has more than twice the number of pyramids you’ll find in Egypt. I know — I couldn’t believe it either, and had to see for myself. Mention Sudan and most travellers will admit to dismissing it as a war-torn stretch of bland desert — plagued by the genocide and refugee crisis in Darfur and the ongoing civil war in the new Republic of South Sudan following a north-south split in 2011. Yet most of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office map of the country is a lovely shade of (safe) green.

But the promotion of African antiquities isn’t a priority for Omar al-Bashir, president of Sudan since his successful military coup in 1989. It’s up to travellers to take the initiative. Indeed, with Egypt still recovering from a huge slump in visitors following a series of high-profile air crashes, Sudan makes the ideal alternative — with the added bonus of zero crowds or touts.

I leave the rickshaws and yellow taxis of Khartoum, the capital, to drive north on a slick belt of Chinese-built, tarred road towards Soleb — an ancient town of tombs and pyramids that is home to the Temple of Soleb, one of the best-preserved temples left in Sudan. Here, on the west bank of the Nile river, not a single fence bars me from entering.

There’s no guard posted at an admission booth and — best of all — I’m completely alone. Shards of the far past crumble all around me: towering columns, arches and walls all carved with cartouches. Built by Pharaoh Amenhotep III in the 14th century BC, and dedicated to Egyptian Supreme God Amun, it was visited by none other than sickly child-king Tutankhamun. He inscribed his name on of one the Prudhoe Lions that once guarded the entrance — now missing from the site, as it sits in the British Museum.

I follow the processional path leading from the Nile into the belly of the temple and there, high above my head (which indicates where the sand level would have been when it was rediscovered in 1844), are the names of those first Victorian archaeologists to explore the site, chiselled into the walls. But why is it here? From 3,100 to 2,890 BC, Egyptian pharaohs sent their army south along the Nile in search of gold, granite for statues, ostrich feathers, and slaves.

Reaching as far south as Jebel Barkal — a small mountain north of Khartoum — they built forts, and later temples, along the route to demonstrate their dominance over the Nubians.

The conquered region came to be known as the Kush and the Kushites adopted all aspects of Egyptian culture, from gods to glyphs. But when the Egyptian empire collapsed in 1,070 BC, the Nubians were free. However, the religion of Amun ran deep and 300 years later Alara, King of the Kush, spearheaded a renaissance of Egyptian culture, including the construction of their own pyramids. Now believing themselves the true sons of the God Amun, Alara’s grandson Piye invaded the north to rebuild the great temples, and for nearly 100 years Egypt was ruled by the “Black Pharaohs”.

At the peak of their reign, under the command of famous Kushite King Taharqa, their territories stretched all the way to Libya and Palestine. The crown of the king bore two cobras: one for Nubia, the other for Egypt.

The last great burial site of these royal Black Pharaohs was at Meroe, an ancient city on the east bank of the Nile. It’s a nine-hour drive from Soleb, but well worth it: here, there are more than 200 pyramids, grouped across three sites. I wake at dawn and, with my guide Hitam, pace across the empty dunes towards the northern site, where 43 Unesco-listed pyramids lie scattered along a ridge.

The honeyed sunlight slides down their sandstone pinnacles as it rises, and the only other people are archaeologists excavating during the cooler morning hours. Two Egyptian eagles soar overhead, silhouetted on the sand, as I stand looking across the wide plain. “Notice anything strange on the stones?” asks Hitam. I scan the bases. “That’s an elephant,” I say, surprised. “And look here: giraffe and gazelle,” he continues, pointing to different blocks. “It’s proof this area was once covered with lush grasslands. The fertile alluvial soil allowed the Kushites to grow barley and sorghum.”

On others are scrawls made by General Kitchener’s soldiers (he of the “Your country needs you” posters). They passed by en route to the bloody Battle of Omdurman, fought to avenge the death of General Gordon, who was killed fighting a Sudanese revolt against the British in 1898. By 300 AD the Kush Empire was in decline.

Dwindling agriculture and increasing raids from Ethiopia and Rome spelled the end of their rule. Christianity and Islam followed, and prayers to Egyptian God Amun faded from memory. Time may have weathered the outer stones, but as I stood alone in silence in the burial chapel that morning, running my fingers across the well-preserved hieroglyphs, I marvelled at the realisation I was touching the same grooves Kushite workers chiselled all those aeons ago.

The legends of the kings and queens live on — and their wish of immortality will be granted if tourists continue to support travel to Sudan, which is so much more than desert.

The Independent