Wednesday, 29 May 2019

Rajahmundry: Awareness drive held for girls on hygiene

He advised them to use sanitary napkins during the menstrual periods rather than soiled clothes that could cause infection. Use of medicines to stop menstrual periods would affect their health, he cautioned and asked them to consult a doctor in case they experience heavy bleeding. He advised the girls not to dump used napkins in toilets and avoid environmental problems in residential areas and further advised them to learn more about it. Earlier, the civic authorities along with several government agencies took out a rally to bring about awareness among the girls on menstrual cycle. ... DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: Deccan Chroniclehttp://southmainalliance.org/UserProfile/tabid/57/userId/638744/Default.aspx

UK remains divided after EU polls

rexiteer and Conservative MEP for the South East Daniel Hannan - one of three Tory MEPs elected so far - agreed it was his party's "worst ever result"."We voted to leave (the EU) and we haven't left - it's that simple," he said.Labour, too, fared badly, with 10 MEPs elected but losing 8 with 15 per cent of the vote. An exultant Farage, who wants Britain to leave the EU by October 31 at any cost, declared: "Never before in British politics has a party just six weeks old won a national election. If Britain does not leave the EU on October 31st, these results will be repeated at a general election. History has been made. This is just the beginning."He claimed the results had delivered "a big, simple message - which is we've been badly let down by two parties who have broken their promises - we have topped the poll in a fairly dramatic style. The two party system now serves nothing but itself. I think they are an obstruction to the modernising of politics... and we are going to take them (the Tories and Labour) on."He also demanded a seat at the top table in any further UK government negotiations with the EU. However, a calmer analysis shows the results are much more complex.It was paradoxically a very encouraging might for two anti-Brexit parties which want the UK to remain a member of the EU - the Liberal Democratic Party and the Green Party.The UK is electing 73 MEPs from across 12 regions - 11 have so far been declared. Turnout was 37 per cent. The Lib Dems, who beat the Brexit party into second place in London, have 15 MEPs, up from 14, with 21 per cent of the vote, while the Greens have seven MEPs, up four, with 12 per cent of the vote.One of the new Lib Dem stars is Indian businessman Dinesh Dhamija, 69, who made his name by setting up an online travel company called Ebookers. The son of a diplomat, Dhamija, who might be the Lib Dem candidate at the next mayoral election in London, was educated at Mayo College, King's School, Canterbury, and Fitzwilliam College where he read law. He was elected in London.Incidentally, another Indian who impressed on the night with clear, incisive analysis was the BBC TV presenter of the election special, Reeta Chakrabarti. "It was a great night to be on, such turbulence! No I don't believe in theatrics, let the story speak for itself," she said.Farage's former party, UKIP (the United Kingdom Independence Party), lost all their 24 seats.Anti-Brexit parties - those in favour of another referendum - collectively took about 40 per cent the vote, compared with 35 per cent for the two parties (the Brexit party and UKIP) in favour of leaving the EU without a deal.Lib Dem leader Sir Vince Cable commented: "Our clear, honest, unambiguous message has won us our best ever European election result, and pushed Corbyn's Labour into third place. We have shown ourselves to be the strongest Remain force in UK politics."He said the results were a message for Labour to "get off the fence" over Brexit - and back Remain. His deputy, Jo Swinson, said "the results should give hope to all of the people out there who want to stop Brexit", and that they "should not be giving up without a fight"."When there is such a general shambles over Brexit, then a further referendum is the best way out of the impasse," she said.Sian Berry, co-leader of the Greens, commented: "There is clear evidence from this of strong support for the UK remaining in the European Union, but also for tackling the causes of Brexit - the massive damage done to so many communities by austerity, tax-dodging and diminution of workers' rights."Sir John Curtice, the UK's leading polling expert and professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde, told the BBC the results showed just how polarised the country had become - "it is a draw".However, Brexiteer candidates in the Tory leadership contest, such as Boris Johnson, are interpreting the results as an indication that they must pursue a hard line over the UK's withdrawal from the EU - or risk another electoral disaster at the general election.Writing in The Daily Telegraph, he said voters in the EU election had issued a "crushing rebuke" to the Conservatives. DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The Telegraphhttps://thefastdiet.co.uk/registration-successful/

Mini Mathur and Cyrus Sahukar to star in Mind the Malhotras

Mind the Malhotras is produced by Dia Mirza. Sharing the first look of the series, the actor wrote on Twitter, 'It's been a real joy producing this one! Every family has its quirks but this one takes the cake (and bakes it too) Trailer of #MindTheMalhotras out tomorrow on @PrimeVideoIN @ApplauseSocial @nairsameer @sahil_sangha @minimathur @cyrus_sahu ❤️' The web series will stream on Amazon Prime Video from June 7. Directed by Sahil Sangha and Ajay Bhuyan, Mind the Malhotras will also feature Denzil Smith, Sushmita Mukherjee, Anandita Pagnis, Nikki Sharma, Jason Dsouza and Rahul Verma in key roles. The trailer of Mind the Malhotras will be released on May 28. DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The Indian Expresshttp://rockndata.net/UserProfile/tabid/61/userId/17833419/Default.aspx

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Puducherry Governor Kiran Bedi thanks PM, CM on completion of 3 years

She also thanked the team Raj Nivas, NGOs and the media. Besides, she expressed her gratitude to the people of Puducherry for their faith and willingness to engage in her endeavours, despite her not speaking their mother tongue. She said Puducherry is a communally harmonious and peaceful place and its people are generally law abiding, barring the occasional rowdy elements and collective failure to wear helmets while riding a two-wheeler. She said political class was providing authentic leadership, public officials were being accessible and sensitive and people were using available resources with care and gratitude. Confusion over functioning of bureaucracy, says L-Kiran Bedi on Tuesday told the Supreme Court that confusion was prevailing over the functioning of bureaucracy due to the Madras High Court order on the issue of administrative control in the Union Territory. Bedi has moved the apex court challenging the Madras High Court verdict which held that Puducherry LG "cannot interfere" in the day-to-day affairs of the UT's elected government. A bench of Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justice Aniruddha Bose said it will hear the plea next week. On May 10, the apex court on pleas of Centre and Bedi had sought a response from Congress MLA K Laksminarayanan, on whose plea the high court had passed the verdict. DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The New Indian Expresshttps://www.vox.com/users/renaultregens

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Transformational election in more ways than one

Prime Minister-elect Narendra Modi, a man with no family background in politics, has claimed that record. As Manmohan Singh had done before him-a studious economist not at ease with party politics, and as humble a background. But Modi was not juxtaposed against him; he had against him someone many perceived as a sulking dynast. A number of dynasts have bitten the dust in this election, speaking of a kind of evolution of Indian polity. As for the prime minister-elect, he seems to be nudging his party towards a more inclusive, pro-poor, centrist position-a space vacated by the Congress. How that goes will be interesting to watch. This election has also seen the victory of a young man's grit in Andhra Pradesh, the triumph of a canny-yet-calm politician in Odisha, and a refusal by Tamil Nadu and Kerala to break away from their traditional template. Despite Kerala offering it an oxygen cylinder, the grand old party seems to be asphyxiating. Two of its state governments, Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka, are gasping for breath. The party itself is in a strange zone where it does not know its future, whether it has a future at all. DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The New Indian Expresshttps://smaforetagslan.blogspot.com/2019/04/hall-tabs-pa-dina-kunder-de-basta.html

BJP trying to enter hills: ally IPFT

The BJP is trying to do this at the cost of our organisation." On whether these clashes could affect the alliance, he said the tie-up was not on political grounds. "The BJP's agenda is sabka saath, sabka vikas. Our clear agenda is Twipraland. Our alliance will not be affected," he claimed.Debbarma said the IPFT voters had switched to the Congress in the parliamentary polls because its president Rahul Gandhi had said at Khumulwng on March 20 that his party would scrap the citizenship amendment bill if it was voted to power."Rahul Gandhi promised the indigenous people in the run-up to Lok Sabha elections that his party would scrap the citizenship bill if it was voted to power. We, therefore, believe many of our voters switched to the Congress owing to his promise," he said.The IPFT got a vote share of 4.16 per cent while the Congress received 25.3 per cent votes.Debbarma also claimed that it would have fared much better if not for the Congress's anti-bill movement. He, however, denied that it was a mistake to not focus on the bill. "Our main agenda is Twipraland and we campaigned in its favour. The IPFT supporters left the party and joined the Congress after getting lured by the promises of the bill being scrapped. I believe they would come back. The fate of the Congress was sealed across the country anyway," Debbarma said.He said the IPFT would field its candidates for the gram panchayat polls around August and the autonomous district council polls.BJP spokesperson Nabendu Bhattacharya denied the IPFT allegation and said the senior leaders of the regional party would not agree to the reason for the BJP's increased influence. "We don't need to damage anyone's support base. People have given a clear indication of who they want in the Lok Sabha results. People decide which party they will choose," he said.In 2018, the IPFT formed an alliance with the BJP and together won 44 out of 60 seats in the Tripura Assembly and formed a coalition government, ending 25 years of Left rule. DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The Telegraphhttps://ask.fm/ruheenasazzu

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'Southpaw shortage not a concern for India's batting', says Sachin Tendulkar

'Ideally left-right combination is something which disturbs the bowler's line and length and also the captain has to readjust his fielding,' Tendulkar, 46, said in an interview ahead of the World Cup, which starts in England on Thursday. 'But if you have good quality batters, which we do, then it really doesn't matter whether it is a left-hand right-hand combination. We have some solid batters who can deliver the punch.' With the experienced partnership of Rohit Sharma and Dhawan locked in as openers and captain Virat Kohli coming in at first drop, the 1983 and 2011 champions have a top order the rival of any in the game. But they will go into this year's World Cup with a soft underbelly having failed to settle on a number four, with KL Rahul the favourite to fill the position after his century in Tuesday's practice match against Bangladesh. Following next in the batting order will be veteran wicketkeeper-batsman Mahendra Singh Dhoni, whose 341 ODI appearances makes him the most experienced player at this year's World Cup. India's 2011 World Cup winning captain is considered the best finisher in contemporary cricket and his inputs from behind the stumps would be as important, said Tendulkar. 'It's important that someone who's standing behind the wickets has played for such a long time and has also led India and is in the best possible position to figure out what's happening off the surface,' Tendulkar said. 'Whether the ball is stopping, bouncing, or skidding, whatever it is, he knows exactly how the ball is coming and he knows where the gaps are and how to close those gaps. His contribution and inputs are always going to be important. 'Other keepers also try and do the same thing but MS's experience is going to count a lot.' India boast of world's top-ranked ODI bowler in quick Jasprit Bumrah while wrist spinners Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal also feature in the top 10. Tendulkar, who remains the only cricketer to score 100 centuries across formats, played six consecutive World Cups from 1992 and holds the records for most runs and centuries in the tournament's history. He is confident India have a 'complete' bowling attack to win their third 50-over title. 'We have someone like Bhuvneshwar (Kumar) who swings the ball, (Mohammed) Shami who is skiddy off the pitch, Bumrah who is the number one bowler in the world in this format,' said Tendulkar, a member of India's 2011 World Cup triumph at home. 'We have someone like Chahal and Kuldeep who are wrist spinners. So there is variety also in the middle overs. Ravindra Jadeja can keep things tight. 'And we have supporting bowlers in Hardik (Pandya), Vijay Shankar and Kedar Jadhav. So all in all a well-balanced bowling attack I would say.' The World Cup returns to the 10-team format to maintain quality of the competition after featuring 14 in each of the last two editions. The decision was criticised by former players and associate nations, who are upset at being denied the chance to rub shoulders with the top sides of the world. 'Ideally if it's called the World Cup then the world should be participating. We need to find ways to engage more teams yet keep that standard of playing high,' Tendulkar said. 'It's not going to happen overnight. We need to find ways to do that. I will love to see more than 10 teams participating but also at the same time not compromise on the standard of playing. 'It's going to be a lengthy process. Lesser teams should get more exposure to get ready for big tournaments.' India suffered the ignominy of being eliminated in the opening round of the tournament in 2007 while 2019 hosts England met the same fate last time the showpiece event was held in Australia and New Zealand four years back. But this year's format — which will see all teams playing each other with the top four advancing to the semi-finals — will ensure teams have a shot at redemption, according to Tendulkar. 'This format still gives you a chance to come back. You are not out even before you wake up,' Tendulkar said. 'Sometimes it can be harsh. Since this is the World Cup, one would want to get another chance. If it's a bad day then you have time to recover and this format allows you to recover.' ... DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: Deccan Chroniclehttp://yarp.com/9abe8736e2a3

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