Sunday, 26 January 2014

Shutdown, Mobile suspension marks Jan. 26 in Kashmir

KL Report


SRINAGAR


A Complete shutdown is observed in the whole valley of Kashmir on Sunday, on the eve of Indian Republic Day.


Shutdown call was given by all the separatist parties and groups including Hurriyat (G), Hurriyat (M), Hurriyat (JK) and JKLF by calling the Indian Republic Day as “A Black Day”.


All the shops and business establishments are closed and the roads are giving a deserted look as no traffic is plying accept police and forces vehicles.


Reports of complete shutdown have reached from all the ten district headquarters of Kashmir.


Authorities had made unprecedented arrangements of security by deputing thousands of police and forces personnel on every road of Srinagar and elsewhere who had erected checkpoints two days earlier.


Mobile phones and internet services were suspended from Sunday morning to 1PM as has been the tradition on every 26th January and 15th August.


Amidst unprecedented security arrangements Republic Day functions were held in every district headquarter. The largest function of Kashmir was held at Bakhshi Stadium, Srinagar.






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Saturday, 25 January 2014

State awards announced on R-Day

KL Report


JAMMU


The State Government Saturday released the list of names for grant of State Awards on Republic Day in various fields.


Mr. Ghulam Rasool Tak (posthumously), Mr. Akhil Singh (posthumously) have been accorded State award for Bravery.


Mr. G. N. Gauhar (Writer) has been accorded State Award for achievement in the field of literature.


Mr. Rashid Haafiz (Folk Singer) and Mr. Suraj Singh (Singer) have been accorded State Award for performing Arts.


Mr. Majid Ahmad Mir, (Kani Shawl Art) has been awarded for excellence in Arts and Crafts.


Dr. Mohammad Ishaq Wani, Director General Budget, Finance Department, Mr. Shahzada Bilal, Director, Perspective and Manpower Planning, Planning and Development Department, Dr. Shakti Gupta, Professor and Medical Superintendent AIIMS, New Delhi and Dr. Anil Gupta Professor and Head-cum-Medical Superintendent, Department of Hospital Administration, PGIMER, Chandigarh have been accorded State Award for meritorious public service.


Ms Padma Sachdev (Writer) has been accorded State life time achievement award.


Mr. Atul Pangotra (Taekwondo), Mr. Rashid Ahmed Choudhary, (Fencing), Ms Rita Devi (Handball), Mr Zakariya Yaseen Bhat (Thang-Ta) and Mr. Shubham Khajuria (Cricket) have been accorded State Award for outstanding Sports person.


Mr. Vivek Sharma Bureau Chief, State Times has been accorded State Award for outstanding media person.






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Director General’s Prison Medal awards for 10 officials

KL Report


SRINAGAR


The Director General of Prisons, J&K K. Rajendra Kumar, awarded the Director General’s Prison Medal to 10 Officers of the J&K Prisons Department on the eve of Republic Day 2014 in recognition of their Meritorious and Exemplary Services.


The Director General’s Prison Medal has been awarded this year for the first time to the Prison personnel in the history of the J&K Prisons Department.


The Award was instituted by the Government of Jammu and Kashmir in order to establish an in-built system of recognising outstanding service rendered by the Prison personnel and to boost the morale of the Prison personnel who are discharging highly onerous duty. Ten Commendation Medals would be awarded every year on the eve of Republic Day to the Prison personnel.


The awardees include three Prison Officers- Saroop Chand, Dy. Superintendent, Abdul Razzak Malla, Assistant Superintendent and Abdul Samad Bhat, Assistant Superintendent; three Head Warders- Muhammad Afzal Khan, Naresh Kumar Sharma, Kuldeep Kumar besides Charanjeet Singh, SG Warder, Muhammad Khan, Warder, Mst Shaheena Akhtar, Warder and. Sanjay Kumar, follower.


While congratulating the awardees the Director General of Prisons expressed the hope that they would continue to work with the same zeal and enthusiasm in future also. (CNS)






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Closure of Pathribal case, a miscarriage of Justice: CPI (M)

KL Report


SRINAGAR


Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has Saturday said that the decision of the Army Court of Inquiry to close the case on the Pathribal killing of five civilians in Kashmir is a travesty of justice.


It may be recalled that the CBI had investigated the matter and chargesheeted five army officers on the charges of abduction and murder.


CPI(M) stated that consequent to a Supreme Court decision, the case was taken up by an army court resulting in this miscarriage of justice. Exoneration of the army offices is also a glaring instance of how the army operates with impunity under the Armed Forces Special Powers Act.


“The people of Kashmir will draw the obvious conclusion that they are subject to double standards as far as justice is concerned. The crime against innocent civilians in Pathribal should not go unpunished. Steps should be taken immediately to get the case reverted to the judicial system and a speedy trial be conducted.”






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Senile saddle

Shiekh Tabish


photo


Everybody is in rush at the moment. Some are working hard, so that they can build their dream house. Some want to buy a car of their dreams. And some want to send their children in the best schools. Still some want to get the best present for their wives. And then, some want to have the best grooms in the world for their daughters.


Everybody wants something. Children want good marks in their exams. And it seems, freewheeling of dreams have no pause.


But amid rolling of wants and wishes, something remains untouched! The other day, I saw young and restless making mockery of an elder. As if they had no regard and reverence left for his existence. That giggle, that smirk, and that flash of self airs: pathetic! Perhaps, they were living in their own skeletons. But, who would cease an expression of evil part of human existence.


The incident reminded me that we often miss old parents. All of us have them at our home. Some have them as their parents and some as their grandparents. And those who haven’t seen them are the most unlucky ones!


But a stark reality of our times is that, we miss their part of wishes. In a mad rush of young, oldies must be missing an attention span. And one lingering question: What concerns them most?


Concerns apart, have we ever thought what are their wishes, what are their dreams, and what are their cravings?


We often brush these queries under rug by thinking that they are old and done with their dreams! Such an insensitive way of caring. “Show off!” My sibling terms it.


So now, they are old. They don’t need anything. What they need is just food, clothes and little bit of money. And little space to live. And that’s it.


Our parents (who are presently young) are busy fulfilling our wishes. They are toiling hard to fulfil dreams they glimpse in us. But what about their old parents?


Our elders only wish to see their children living happily. That too, without any disputes and any issues. They want to stay with their children, not wish to be end up in old age homes. They want to live willingly and lovingly with their children, not forcefully.


Some might argue that elders become sour once they turn senile. But are we such an impatient progeny that we can’t handle such mood swings. Are they not same parents, who lovingly washed our dirty linens when we were just toddlers? Is she not the same mother who suffered greatly when she blossom us in her womb? So many questions, so many clichés and so many instances, and yet rot exists. What an irony!


And when a moral fabric has started to cut loose, many cry that our valley wasn’t known for all this. At present, many old age homes are cropping up across the valley. And unfortunately, nostalgia of old parents living there is leaving them troubled. These deserted elders are the same who have spent their whole life raising these children who have now shown them, door.


Now these children are prosperous and happy. And it was their time to share happiness with their old parents because of whom they are what they are proud of. But in their own swelled-secluded-spaces, they seem to have no room for their parents!


(Shiekh Tabish is studying Journalism from Women College, Srinagar)






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6 Injured in two road accidents

KL Report


SRINAGAR


At least six persons were injured in two separate road accidents across the valley, police said on Saturday.


According to a statement, “a Tata sumo bearing registration number JK010/9903 driven by Mohammad Amin Sheikh son of Ai Mohammad resident of Madeena Chowk Gowkadal rammed into an electric pole at Frestebal near EDI Pampore resulting in injuries to 5 passengers.”


It added, “A load carrier bearing registration number JK04B/1474 hit and injured a pedestrian Abdul Rashid Bhat son of Ghulam Rasool resident of Gund-Maqsood, Chadoora.”


The statement informed that injured have been shifted to hospital for treatment.






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‘Tragic victims’ of LoC trade still stranded

KL Report


SRINAGAR


The 49 truck drivers, who are the residents of divided Kashmir, were on a routine job dropping goods across the Line of Control (LoC) between Pakistan and India when they were left stranded early this month.


For more than a week, they have been stuck in the middle of a row that reflects the difficulty in boosting regional ties through trade. Last Friday, police along the treacherous mountain road leading between the two sides seized a truck and arrested its driver after 114 kilogrammes of heroin was found concealed in a consignment of almonds.


Pakistani authorities then refused to let the trucks in the convoy, back unless the arrested man was returned. They detained 27 trucks and their drivers, who had crossed over on the same day to deliver goods as part of a barter trade agreement that was started as a “confidence-building measure” in 2008.


Huddled inside a hall at the Trade Facilitation Centre in Salamabad, 115 kilometres from Srinagar, drivers from Pakistan administered Kashmir (PaK) are reportedly watching Bollywood films cable TV, though becoming “a tragic movie” themselves.


Trade between the neighbours jumped 36 percent to $2.6 billion in 2013, according to the Indian Department of Commerce. While the diplomats in New Delhi wrangle over the hold-up in, the drivers from the PaK and this side of Kashmir and their families in either side are suffering like anything.






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