Saturday, June 20, 2009

New system to boost efficient train operations, safer journey

20 June ; A state-of-art computerized system is being deployed by Railways across all crew booking lobbies of both drivers and guards for efficient train operations and safer journey.The crew management system (CMS) is proposed to be deployed in 300 crew lobbies aiming at bringing in higher efficiency of drivers and guards and better crew deployment."So far 288 lobbies having 88,000 crew members have been covered and we hope the entire project work would be completed shortly," a senior Railway Ministry official told a news agency. 

Crew lobby is where drivers are assigned their duties and a record is maintained detailing their rosters and hours of work put in. The official said the system will also enable regulation of the working hours of drivers and put an end to complaints of fatigue."Higher performance level would also raise efficiency of train operations and safety of passengers," the official said. 

The crew have been provided with biometric access that makes their authenticity devoid of any proxy reporting.In other words, none other than the assigned driver can take charge of the train, as happened a few months back when a superfast train between New Delhi and Kanpur was operated by unassigned staff, said another official.

Implementation of CMS was approved by the Railways in 2006. The task was entrusted to CRIS for developing and providing the system, which has borrowed the best of diverse system, though not of similar efficiency, prevailing in other zones.

It automates day-to-day business functions of the crew thereby providing information of their status throughout, rostering their duty allocations, providing information on availability of crew at their home station and assigning crew to trains, the official said. 

One of its hallmark lies in keeping track of the crew. It provides global tracking of all crew on the system in real time whether they are on train, resting at headquarters, on training or on leave, the official said.
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By :  News Team

Maoist violence part of "wider gameplan", says CPI(M)

20 June ;  Condemning the Maoist violence against the Left cadre, CPI(M) on Saturday said these attacks were part of a "wider gameplan by powerful vested interests" to destroy the party in its bastion of West Bengal."There is no doubt that this attack against the CPI(M) and its workers and sympathisers is part of the wider game gameplan by powerful vested interests to weaken and destroy the party in its main base of Bengal," the party Central Committee said in a statement in New Delhi. 

The party was of the view that these "fascistic type" of attacks on the CPI(M) were also an attack on the minimum norms of democracy and must be a matter of concern to all democratic minded citizens."In Lalgarh, the Maoist gang with direct and indirect backing of the Trinamool Congress has created a zone of terror against CPI(M) members and supporters."

"It is noted that the Maoist leaders in the area have openly spoken about their contacts and help to the Trinamool- led alliance in all the developments in Nandigram," the party alleged.

The Central Committee said it supports the efforts made by West Bengal government to use both political and administrative measures to free the area from Maoist gangs while taking all steps to reestablish links with the poor tribals living in the area. 

The CPI(M) claimed that since March this year, 53 party members or supporters were killed. In Lalgarh area in West Midnapore district, eight CPI(M) members and workers have been killed and their houses and offices burnt.

"In one instance in Lalgarh, the body of a comrade was kept in the open for three days and his family was not allowed to cremate it," the party claimed.The Central Committee also asked its units all over the country to launch a powerful campaign against the "politics of terror" unleashed by the Trinamool-led alliance as well as against the Maoist gangs.
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By :  News Team

Women need political empowerment: Agatha

20 June : Supporting the much-delayed Women's Reservation Bill, the country's youngest Union Minister and NCP leader Agatha Sangma today said the fair sex need to be empowered politically. Women need political empowerment and equal rights. They should participate in the growth of the society," Agatha told reporters in Shillong.

"However, we need to be careful as there might be cases where politicians might take advantage of the Bill (Women's reservation Bill)," the 28-year-old Minister of State for Rural Development said.

Talking about the schemes of her ministry, Agatha said she is working to bridge the gap between the urban and the rural areas."There is lack of proper implementation of the schemes. It is often seen that the state governments lack the technical know-how and information. The governments should be more proactive," she added.

The Tura MP also said she would act as a facilitator for better coordination between the states and the Centre so that the states are able to justify the funds allotted to them.Asserting that she was taking initiatives for opening up technical schools in the region, the NCP leader said,"We need to address the problems of the struggling youths of the region. They need to be educated technically and their talents need to be channelised".
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By :  News Team

Security forces reclaim Lalgarh police station from Maoists control

20 June : Security forces on Saturday stormed Lalgarh and without much resistance reclaimed the police station under control of Maoists as an anti-landmine vehicle cleared the path for the security personnel who reached the police station to take charge of the building.

Security forces today moved into Lalgarh to snuff out the six-day old siege by Maoists who ambushed a convoy en route to the area in West Midnapore district injuring six policemen.A landmine, hidden underneath a culvert, exploded as a convoy ferrying security forces passed over it on the West Midnapore-Bankura district border injuring four policemen, Superintendent of Police, Burdwan, Humayun Kabir, who was leading the men told the news agency.

A group of around 60 Maoists then fired at the convoy injuring another two, he said.In Delhi, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee said the West Bengal government was considering banning the CPI(Maoists) following a suggestion by Home Minister P Chidambaram.

The first group of securitymen arrived at Lalgarh police station, which had been cut off by the tribals since November last year, with the police saying that it was a 'partial victory'.DIG (Midnapore Range) Praveen Kumar told an impromptu press conference before the police station, "It is a partial victory. The hundred per cent operation is yet to be completed. It may take days, even weeks to do this."

Maoist leader Koteswar Rao, who is believed to be providing leadership to the agitation at Lalgarh, today said that the West Bengal government should stop the police operation and hold talks with the people to find a solution to their problems.

"It is a partial victory. The hundred per cent operation is yet to be completed. It may take days, even weeks to do this," DIG (Midnapore Range) Praveen Kumar told an impromptu press conference outside the Lalgarh police station.

An anti-landmine vehicle cleared the path for the security personnel who reached the police station to take charge of the building.Central forces, comprising men from BSF and CRPF, fanned out in the forests for combing operations against the Maoists. 

The securitymen donning camouflage and bullet-proof vests sanitised the five-km stretch of Jhitka jungle, a Maoist area near here.AK-47 and Insas rifle-toting securitymen came under intermittent fire from Maoists at the Pingboni-Sarenga road today, Superintendent of Police Burdwan Humayan Kabir said adding two landmines planted on the road were defused.Lalgarh police station was out of bounds since November last year when tribals under the banner of People's Committee Against Police Atrocities launched a boycott of police to protest raids on their homes following a landmine blast targeting Chief Minister Buddhadev Bhattacharjee's convoy.

"We have an agenda to establish the rule of the law. Our next move will be to clear 42 villages in areas in Lalgarh from the agitators," Kumar said.Though it normally takes two hours to reach Lalgarh from Midnapore, security forces took three days."We moved with caution. We took measures not to risk the lives of ordinary people," Kumar said.When the security forces were driving from Pingboni, they were obstructed by a number of women. 

The forces were moving cautiously for the last two days to avoid civilian casualties, he said.On areas declared 'liberated' by the agitators, he said, "the rule of the law is everywhere. There is no legal concept of a no-entry zone. No one is more powerful than the government."

Asked about Chhatradhar Mahato, leader of the People's Committee Against Police Atrocities spearheading the agitation since November last year, Kumar said he would be arrested.Firefights with the Maoists occurred at two places between Pirakata and Bhimpur and near Pingboni last night with the villagers fleeing to safety, police said.The Maoists fired on the Lalgarh police station, with the securitymen there firing back.

Anti Malaria Camp

Chandigarh, June 19:-June 2009 is being observed as Anti-Malaria Month. As a part of observance of the anti malaria month, the National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme, Chandigarh, organized an anti-malaria camp in the Labour colony No.5.   Dr. G. P. Singh, SMO, Poly Clinic-45, inaugurated the camp. He asked the residents to report to the Poly Clinic for availing themselves of free treatment facilities for seasonal diseases. He also made an appeal to the residents to participate in the health activities of the programme to make their area mosquito and malaria free.

Speaking on the occasion, Mr. H.C. Gera, Anti Malaria Officer-cum-Nodal Officer (IDSP) (Swine Flu) UT-Chandigarh, stressed that thickly populated Labour colony No.5 required intense surveillance for detection of fever cases. He advised the surveillance teams to search out cases of fever from inner lanes and advised them to report at the camp site for spot examination of slides. The various teams were also asked to keep an eye on flu like illness during the surveillance so that those suffering from influenza-like illness got due attention.

          He also emphasized hand washing and other precautionary measures for prevention of common flu and other similar ailments. For tackling the H1N1 influenza Type A problem, the department has made sufficient arrangements in all hospitals. He advised the residents not to panic about the disease as H1N1 influenza Type A is curable. A flag march-cum-procession with placards was organized by the department in which the residents of the colony, officers and the staff participated.

The disease surveillance teams collected 236 numbers of slides from different areas, which were examined on the spot and the persons suffering from fever were given presumptive treatment for control of malaria.
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By :  News Team

Horrendous assault on Tehsildar at Ludhiana is shocking to my ethics and is highly deplorable: Bir Devinder.

Chandigarh, June 20 : Unprecedented vandalism and horrendous assault on Tehsildar Major GS Binepal (retd.) at Ludhiana is shocking to my ethics and is highly deplorable. No one,  be of any hue, dare not, to hold the state craft  to ransom for two hours and that too , day time during office hours. Media has aptly described the act as Taliban act in Ludhiana. If this kind of   misadventure is allowed to go scot-free and not handled with iron hand by powers that be, I am afraid it is bound to dribble catastrophic   implication for the governance in the entire State.

 Its appalling that an officer has been dragged out of his office, stripped naked and then  assaulted  with sticks and iron rods to their satisfaction in the full glare of the public  . The assailants even dare not to allow the police vehicle to move, in order to take the badly injured officer to the hospital. Incident certainly calls for unequivocal condemnation by one and all; it also entails exemplary punitive action by the State Government against all those who are perceived to be responsible to perpetrate the horrendous crime against an upright officer who is unfortunately handicapped also. Major GS Binepal is an officer above board, to the best of my knowledge as he has served in my constituency during my tenure as Deputy Speaker and also as MLA Kharar.

I would urge upon the Hon'ble Chief Minister S. Parkash Singh Badal to handle the matter at his personal level and C.M also must ensure fool proof security to the officer because as a whistle blower he had earlier exposed the infamous stamp paper scam sometime back.

A full scale, time bound probe should be ordered to look in to the nexuses of the criminals who all master minded  the terrible assault on the officer and the circumstances which led to  the crime of unprecedented notoriety .

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By :  News Team

Vice President’s address at the convocation of University of Kashmir

20 June ; The Vice President of India Shri M. Hamid Ansari has said that a clear distinction is to be made between assimilation and integration. The former implies the blending or fusing of minority groups or cultures into the dominant society or culture. Delivering convocation address at the University of Kashmir in Srinagar (J&K) today, he said that it is usually reflective of the desire of the dominant group on grounds of cultural nationalism and is resented and resisted by minority ones. Integration, on the other hand, implies the movement of minority groups and the underprivileged sections of a society, without erasing their identity, into the mainstream of the society to give them full access to the opportunities, rights and services available to the members of the mainstream. It is always a two-way street and thus goes hand in hand with social solidarity.

 He said that accommodation of diversity has been consciously incorporated as a distinctive feature of the Indian state. It implies that a standardized image of an Indian cannot be constructed; if presented, it is partial, incomplete, misleading. Despite this accommodative framework, there have been acts of omission and commission impacting on identity and integration issues. Perceptions have evolved nationally and globally and highlight areas that remain to be addressed. Democratic politics and economic liberalisation has also strengthened regionalist trends. Linguistic reorganization has ceased to be the culmination of the process of expression of identities. Linguistically homogenous states have been subdivided over grievances of development. New demands for statehood continue to be made on grounds of ethnicity, culture or regional grievances. The imperative of better governance adds a sense of urgency to these.

The Vice President said that the youth of Jammu & Kashmir, like in the rest of the country, want to fulfil their potential, lead lives with dignity and honour and contribute to their communities and the nation. The Government is committed to enable this and thus herald a new future for the people of Jammu & Kashmir.    

Following is the text of the Vice President's Convocation address:

 "B' naam-e-khuda-vand jaan aafarin

Hakim-e-sukhan dar zubaan aafarin

It is difficult to come to Kashmir and not be reminded of an admiring visitor's description penned many centuries back:

'Kashmir is a garden of eternal spring. Its pleasant meads and enchanting cascades are beyond all description. There are running streams and fountains beyond all count. Wherever the eye reaches, there are verdure and running water.'

Time does not dent the beauty of nature. Time does allow humans to enhance the benefits they derive from it. Time, regrettably, does not stand still. We never step into the same river twice; nor can we use a time machine to re-live a gone by era. This university campus, and its endeavour in different branches of knowledge, suggests a desire to move with time. It would undoubtedly please the spirit of saints and rishis who inhabited this land in yesteryears and imparted so much of wisdom and spiritual solace to the people.

I am happy to participate in today's ceremony. Convocations are to academic life what festivals are to social life; they signify rites of passage, the passing of seasons, a celebration of achievement and benediction for facing the harsh world beyond the somewhat sheltered academic environment. The motto of the University –

 – From Darkness to Light – exemplifies the transition that graduating students undergo.

Convocations are also occasions to draw lessons from the experience of life. I too may be permitted to do so. Let me begin by recalling a couplet addressed to students of my own alma mater a long time back by a poet very well known to you:

Auron ka hai payam aur, mera payaam aur hai
Ishq ke dard mand ka tarz-e-kalaam aur hai

 My message today pertains to the world of tomorrow. We live in an era of rapid change. A quarter of a century back an eminent historian wrote on the need to prepare for the twenty first century; he offered the prognosis that instead of a 'new world order' we confront 'a troubled and fractured planet whose problems deserve the serious attention of politicians and public alike.' The man and woman in the street, he added, know that their world is changing; they demand political responses in addition to technological ones.

I venture to suggest that these matters are of critical relevance to a society like ours. India is engrossed in challenges of development and political empowerment. It is one-sixth of the world in terms of population and is a microcosm of the diversities that characterise our world. It has been rightly called 'the largest multicultural society in the world.' The accommodation of diversity has been an Indian trait down the ages, made possible by an innate capacity for synthesis.  

How do we use this asset in the future?

In what manner can we harness it for accommodating the competing demands of identity, autonomy and integration in a world that is perennially shrinking and inter-dependent?

How would this translate into institutions and practices?

How would it impact on the daily lives of citizens? What may be the pitfalls that need to be avoided?

What, in concrete terms, should be expectations of youth from society?

A healthy society faces these, and related questions, and responds to them meaningfully.

The process of social cohesion proceeds from small groups to larger ones; each step enlarges the common agenda and reveals points of convergence and divergence; each divergence necessitates a choice: rejection or adjustment in the wider framework. In this manner rights and duties, as also adjustment and accommodation become integral to social life. The process also reveals a desire to distinguish between what is shared and what is held close to the chest. The latter generates the impulse for self-management or autonomy, to the exclusion of those who participate in managing the realm of what is shared. It thus becomes an essential characteristic of identity and reflects on patterns of governance. When transferred to the sphere of public life, it takes the shape of several autonomies – horizontal, vertical, political, fiscal and cultural - that may be sought. In this sense, autonomy ceases to be an exceptional principle in a democracy and, instead, becomes one of its essential ingredients functioning, in the words of one scholar, as 'autonomies in perpetual dialogue among themselves, linked by respective responsibilities to retain the autonomous places in a dialogic universe'.                                                                                                                                 

It needs to be admitted straight away that the question of identity, integration and social cohesion is complex and necessitates conscious and continuous efforts at calibration of challenges and responses. It requires identification and justification of areas of autonomy and integration.

Two other terms, deprivation and alienation, are contextually relevant in relation to groups. The former signifies persons who find themselves disadvantaged or lacking for reasons beyond their control; the latter denotes estrangement, social isolation and powerlessness. Both impact on social cohesion.

A clear distinction is to be made between assimilation and integration. The former implies the blending or fusing of minority groups or cultures into the dominant society or culture. It is usually reflective of the desire of the dominant group on grounds of cultural nationalism and is resented and resisted by minority ones. Integration, on the other hand, implies the movement of minority groups and the underprivileged sections of a society, without erasing their identity, into the mainstream of the society to give them full access to the opportunities, rights and services available to the members of the mainstream. It is always a two-way street and thus goes hand in hand with social solidarity.

The debate on identity, autonomy and integration was part of the Indian discourse in the Freedom Movement and in the formative period of the Constitution. In the words of a distinguished academic, 'the Indian Constitution was well ahead of its time not only in recognizing diversities but also in providing for representation of the collectivities in the formal democratic structures.' The special provisions for guarantees or affirmative action in six broad categories – caste, class, backwardness, religion, region, sex and language – is evidence of this approach for securing justice and ensuring cultural autonomy in a composite culture within a framework of a quasi-federal structure driven by an overriding imperative of maintaining territorial integrity.

Closer scrutiny shows that the multiple identities so recognized are amplified in our Constitution for legal and operative purposes and total as many as thirteen - identities grounded in religion; identities grounded in language; caste identities; tribal identities; community identities, such as in the case of the Anglo-Indian community; class identities, such as in the case of the socially and educationally backward classes; racial identities, notably prohibiting discrimination on grounds of race and permitting notification of specific races or groups within races to be deemed to be Scheduled Castes; gender identities; identities grounded in region, place of birth or residence, especially in the context of prohibition of discrimination and provisions contained in Part XXI of the Constitution; identities based on age, such as those provisions relating to children and the aged; minority identities, whether based on religion, language, script or culture; identities grounded in descent, especially in the context of non-discrimination on grounds of descent; and identities based on occupation, such as agricultural or industrial workers, defence personnel or civil servants etc.

Accommodation of diversity has thus been consciously incorporated as a distinctive feature of the Indian state. It implies that a standardized image of an Indian cannot be constructed; if presented, it is partial, incomplete, misleading. Despite this accommodative framework, there have been acts of omission and commission impacting on identity and integration issues.

Perceptions have evolved nationally and globally and highlight areas that remain to be addressed. Democratic politics and economic liberalisation has also strengthened regionalist trends. Linguistic reorganization has ceased to be the culmination of the process of expression of identities. Linguistically homogenous states have been subdivided over grievances of development. New demands for statehood continue to be made on grounds of ethnicity, culture or regional grievances. The imperative of better governance adds a sense of urgency to these.

 

These impulses of identity assertion and recognition confront two contradictory trends at the micro and macro levels. On the one hand, forms of identity assertion at national and state levels combined with existing patterns of political mobilisation have been perceived as thwarting the impulses towards internal integration and consolidation. A modern market economy does not coexist with autarky. On the contrary, societal transformation resulting from economic growth and urbanization has erased or downplayed certain identities while emphasizing new ones. Each of these impacts the political agenda at local, regional and national levels.   

 

At the other end of the spectrum, we are living in a global village where new integrating impulses have gone beyond national boundaries weaving nations into a common fabric of economic and financial architecture, shared membership of multi-lateral institutions and common value systems governing individual and state behaviour. Countervailing forces have also emerged. Thus, globalization has produced a counter trend of resurgence of nationalism and of an emphasis on national and cultural identities.              Domestically, one notices certain unhealthy trends towards a homogenising nationalism that flattens diversities, and has little respect for local cultures, value systems and ways of life.

What do these developments mean to common citizens?  What indeed is our vision of the interplay between identity and integration in the 21st century?

First, it is clear that living in isolation is not an option. It is nevertheless essential to realize that there are many ways of living together. Integration is necessary and desirable; assimilation is neither desirable nor practical. Throughout our history, we have seen identities being built on a series of inclusions and exclusions reflective of ground realities. The challenge in the future, as in the past, would be to maintain a balance in favour of inclusions.

Second, political management of identities and ethnicities has tended to vary between accommodation, polarization and manipulation. The only workable arrangement for a country of our diversity is accommodation in a constitutional and democratic framework. This necessitates negotiations with the state, and by the state. The politics of polarization and manipulation practices should have no place in our country.

Third, in an evolving polity and a developing economy, institutional dynamism plays an important role in making the conceptual transition from plurality to multiculturalism. The latter 'is concerned with issues of equality: it asks, whether the different communities living together peacefully, co-exist as equals in the public arena.' Such an approach would result in 'a form of citizenship that is marked neither by a universalism generated by complete homogenisation, nor by the particularism of self-denial and closed communities.' Such a vision of society would be contingent on the citizen body imbibing a new set of values.

Fourth, the youth in the age group of 15-35 years constitutes nearly 40 per cent of the total population of India. It is the same in the case of Jammu and Kashmir. This group represents the most vibrant and dynamic demographic segment and constitutes potentially a most valuable human resource. Youth empowerment would mean effective participation in decision making processes, with requisite knowledge, skills and capabilities.  It is premised on attainment of higher educational levels and expertise by our young citizens, in line with their abilities and aptitudes, and access to employment opportunities.

How is it possible?

Two years ago I had, as the Chairman of the Working Group constituted by the Prime Minister on Confidence Building Measures, submitted a set of recommendations which also focussed on the Kashmiri youth.  The issue was also addressed in the Report of the Working Group on Economic Development of J&K. The Prime Minister had expressed complete agreement with the view that implementation of the Working Group recommendations was the key to retaining the confidence of the people.  

There is no option but to reconstruct the economy of the state ravaged by two decades of militancy.  The potential of youth must be utilised to get out of the 'backwardness trap' of low economic activity, low employment and low income generation. Better education and health for the youth lead to inclusive growth where the poor continue to grow and benefit from it.

The graduating students today represent a minuscule and fortunate elite among youth having obtained tertiary education.  We need to focus on creating adequate facilities for technical and vocational education, for skill up-gradation and improving employability of youth. New opportunities in services sector, including in the IT industry, must be made available to the youth of Jammu & Kashmir.

The youth of Jammu & Kashmir, like in the rest of the country, want to fulfil their potential, lead lives with dignity and honour and contribute to their communities and the nation. The Government is committed to enable this and thus herald a new future for the people of Jammu & Kashmir.

How realistic is such an approach? The answer seems to lie in our experience with other innovative norms that challenged orthodoxy. The processes of devolution of power to Panchayats and Nagar Palikas, the acceptance of the need for transparency in governance, the insistence on fundamental rights and observance of human rights norms, are instances of new perceptions impacting on state practice. Each proclaims a new beginning; none can yet claim perfection; all need to be pursued vigorously. The challenge, as Richard Falk would put it, is for 'morally sensitive and forward-looking political forces' to 'seek unexplored normative potential.' No segment of public is better qualified to do it than the youth. For them immobility, retreat, or disinterest is not an option.

I felicitate the students graduating today and wish them success in life. They would, I venture to hope, hold aloft the banner of the University and adhere to its motto. As citizens they should remember Edmund Burke's dictum that 'the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.' To do so meaningfully, they need to heed Allama Iqbal's advice:

Jab tak na zindagi ke haqaiq pe ho nazar

Tera zajaj ho na sake ga hareef-e-sang.

The focus, above all, has to be on self development:

                    Taamir-e-khudi kar, asar aahe rasa daikh.

I am grateful to the Chancellor of the University for inviting me to participate in the Convocation today".


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By :  News Team

Shri Kapil Sibal launches anti-ragging helpline 1800-180-5522

The toll-free, 24/7, nation-wide anti-ragging helpline was launched today by the Union Human Resource Development Minister, Shri Kapil Sibal. Speaking on the occasion, Shri Sibal said that this is a historic moment as a concrete step has been taken against ragging. He stated that ragging is a national menace, demeaning and destructive for students. While thanking the Supreme Court for its judgment of 8th May, 2009, wherein the UGC had been directed by it to set up such a helpline with the help of the Ministry of Communications & IT, Shri Sibal pointed out that directions of the Supreme Court were now being implemented. He also pointed out that the students are now being protected by the stake holders in society. 

            The toll free No. of this helpline is 1800-180-5522, and the Email is helpline@antiragging.net. The other toll-free number 155222 is under implementation. The Call Centre is located at Delhi and the calls are responded to by professional manpower in English, Hindi and selected regional languages with call recording system. 

            When the complaint is registered, immediately it is given a unique number. Thereafter automatically, an acknowledgement receipt with all details is sent to the concerned authorities within 15 minutes of the receipt of the complaint. This number can be used as reference for all future communications and feedback. Once the grievance has been received by the Institution, the concerned officer looks into the merit of the complaint and forwards the same for action.        Once the matter has been marked to the concerned officer for action, it is tracked till the necessary actions are taken. If the complaint is not acted upon within the specified timeframe, the senior officers get a reminder either by email or by phone calls. The level of reminders would be escalated at institutional as well as executive levels if required. This ensures the accountability of all authorities in the chain. After the necessary actions have been taken, the concerned  student gets the call/email confirmation containing the details of the complaint and related actions taken.     

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By :  News Team

Awards to journalists

The Public Relations Minister gave away Madhavrao Sapre 2009 Award to Shri Jagdish Upasne, Lalbaldev Singh Award to Shri Ganesh Sakalle, Makhanlal Chaturvedi Award to Shri Hemant Pal and Shri Dhananjay Pratap Singh. Jagdish Prasad Chaturvedi Award was given to Shri Dinesh Nigam and Shri Prabhu Mishra. Rameshwar Guru Award went to Smt. Meera Gandhi Singh and Shri Rajendra Dhanotia and Jhabarmal Sharma Award was given away to Shri Brajesh Rajput and Shri Manoj Sharma. The Rajat Jayanti Samman was given away to senior journalists Shri Lajja Shankar Herdenia, Shri Balmukund Bharti and Shri Qamar Ashfaq.

Congratulating the award winners, the Public Relations Minister said that all of them have given important contribution in the state's journalism. Special guest Shri Umashankar Gupta also praised the activities of Madhavrao Sapre Museum. He said that this museum has carved out its niche in the country. In his address, senior journalist Shri Jagdish Upasne said journalists face many challenges. Journalism and journalists get respect only when journalism is meaningful, credible and unbiased.

The welcome address was delivered by senior journalist and museum's vice president Shri Rakesh Pathak while museum's president Shri Shivkumar Awasthi welcomed the guests with bouquets. Smt. Manjulata Anuja proposed a vote of thanks. Vice-chancellor of Makhanlal Chaturvedi Journalism University Shri Achyutanand and museum's founder Shri Vijay Dutt Shridhar were also present on the occasion.
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By :  News Team

Journalism research and educational institutions to be promoted fully: Shri Laxmikant Sharma

Bhopal:Saturday, June 20, 2009: Public Relations and Culture Minister Shri Laxmikant Sharma has said that full protection and promotion will be given to journalism research and educational institutions for the spread of journalism. Shri Sharma was addressing a function at Madhavrao Sapre Museum where journalists were given away various awards. Local MLA Shri Umashankar Gupta was the especial guest.

Shri Sharma said that media institutes and social organisations have important role to play in promoting research and study of journalism. Important achievements can be made through cooperation of these institutions as well as government help. The Public Relations Minister praised Madhavrao Sapre Museum saying that it has become a pilgrimage of journalism. Remarkable efforts are being made through it for promoting research and study of journalism. The Public Relations Minister announced to double the annual grant given to the museum from Rs 5 lakh to Rs 10 lakh.--
By :  News Team

Initiative for transparency in education sector Teachers' service books now on internet

Bhopal:Saturday, June 20, 2009: With a view to bringing about transparency in Education Department's working, the state government is going to post teachers' service books online.Giving this information, School Education Minister Smt. Archana Chitnis said that this initiative will not only redress teachers' problems but will also bring about transparency in work apart from increasing efficiency. For this purpose instructions have already been given to all the Block Source Coordinators. They have been told to get all the teachers registered on the website.

Smt. Chitnis informed that after registration, all the service books will be received from Cluster Centres (Sankul Kendras) and posted on the net. She said that the objective of posting service books on the net is to bring about transparency, time-bound disposal of cases pertaining to promotion and increment as well as financial issues. The new system will also facilitate swift merger into teacher's grade, yearly increment within a set timeframe, verification of annual services etc.
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By :  News Team

Bhopal, Narmadapuram divisions have 3076 trained Gosewaks

Bhopal:Saturday, June 20, 2009: A Gosewak Yojana is being implemented in the state with a view to providing veterinary services to animal rearers at the Gram Panchayat level itself. So far, 3076 Gosewaks have been trained in Bhopal and Narmadapuram divisions. Both the divisions have 4575 Gram Panchayats. The Animal Husbandry Department is trying to ensure that each Gram Panchayat has at least one Gosewak.

Every Gosewak is imparted 6-month training in veterinary treatment after which they are given toolkits. District-wise, there are Gosewaks in 150 out of 194 Gram Panchayats of Bhopal, 374 out of 499 Gram Panchayats of Sehore, all the 501 Gram Panchayats of Raisen, 308 out of 581 Gram Panchayats of Vidisha and 584 out of 602 Gram Panchayats of Rajgarh while in Narmadapuram division there are Gosewaks in 512 out of 558 Gram Panchayats in Betul district, 433 out of 429 Gram Panchayats in Hoshangabad district and 114 out of 211 Gram Panchayats in Harda district. Apart from providing veterinary treatment, these Gosewaks also apprise villagers of department schemes.

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By :  News Team

Dr Tejaswi donated blood to save critically ill AIDS patient life

By : www.theindiapost.com :  55 yrs old Mr Radheshyam Chowdhary (Name Changed) from Vaishali, who is suffering from  AIDS and is put under WHO stage IV category was in acute need of blood for his survival. None of his family members were ready to donate blood for him except his wife Krishna Chowdhary ( Name Changed), 46 yrs old, but she couldn't donate as she was underweight. Radheshyam's treating physician Dr Diwakar Tejaswi understanding the situation himself donated blood to save his patients life today. After the recovery of Radheshyam's condition, Dr Tejaswi stated that HIV/AIDS in Bihar is increasing rapidly and it is unfortunate that still there is widespread misconception regarding the disease in Bihar. He urged all the healthy people of Bihar aged between 18-60 years, weighing more than 45 kg and having hemoglobin more than 12.5 gram/dl  to donate blood atleast twice yearly so that there will be no scarcity of blood in blood banks.

BTS CRICKET ACADEMY TRIALS

By : www.theindiapost.com ; 20 June :BTS Cricket Academy will conduct trails to select trainees to impart scientific training and gloom them to play in various states, national and international tournaments.  Cricket trails would be held at The Banyan Tree School Ground, Sector 48, Chandigarh on June 21 at 3.30 P.M.  Trails will be conducted in the boys and girls Under-10, Under-12, Under-14, and Under-16 category.  Selection will be done strictly on merits and in each group 30 players will be shortlisted.  Cricket Coaches Surinder Lattha ( N.I.S. ), Parveen Sharma, Amit Verma  ( All Former Ranji Trophy Players ) and Ravi Verma ( International Players) are part of the selection and coaching panel that will choose the trainees.  Besides training BTS Cricket Academy will provide regular exposure with a view to develop match temperament.  Deepak Lotia has been appointed Physical Trainer.  Details of  the facilities available at the BTS Cricket Academy a Ball Throwing Machine would feed the players at different speeds and different angles to develop the players basics very sound.  The Academy will provide different surfaces – two cement, two turf and one mat.  Flood lit facilities would be soon installed which will help the players to practice even in night.  There are three strips at the centre of the stadium.  The Academy would cater to the need of players of Chandigarh, Uttar Pardesh, Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan.  The Academy could also provide hostel facilities to the outstation players.
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By :  News Team

Deputy Registrar of Co-op Housing Societies of Bhayander (In Thane Maharastra) Ignores Mandatory rules of Bye laws

By : www.theindiapost.com : Its shocking but yes its true, the Dy-Registrar of Co-op Housing societies for Bhayander Area Mrs.Mrinalini Heram has ignored a major lapse in the societies of Bhayander where most of the Society Committees have not submitted and nor made Indemnity Bonds. This is mandatory as per Bye Laws of the Co-op Housing Societies.

There is also a Court Ruling where the High Court of Mumbai had sacked the Committee Members who had not submitted Indemnity Bonds within 15 days of Assuming Office; this was brought to the Notice of Mrs.Heram who said yes 95% of Cheating or Mis-Appropriation of society funds is happening in Co-operative Housing Societies in Bhayander Area.

There is no check kept by the Deputy Registrar whether the Balance sheets of all societies have come or not, even after several complaints given to the Registrar office in writing no action is taken against the defaulting Society Committee's.

There is Jungle law prevailing in every field in Bhayander Area and one more such example are the Housing societies of this area where 99% of Society Committees have not made Indemnity Bonds. I can say this because I have myself forwarded several complaints regarding one such society (Siddhivinayak Archid Co-operative Housing Society) along with the Court Ruling Copy to Mrs.Heram but it's in vain. Now it's up to the Law of our country to Question the Registrar who even after knowing the lapses has not taken any action.

By :  News Team