Drug-linked violence shakes Jamaica capital, 31 dead

Jamaican soldiers and police skirmished on Tuesday with armed supporters of a fugitive alleged drug lord facing US extradition in the third day of violence that has killed 31 people, mostly young civilians.

The sound of intermittent gunfire echoed through parts of the Caribbean tourist island’s capital Kingston, as members of the security forces carried out door-to-door searches for Christopher “Dudus” Coke, 42. The United States is seeking his extradition on drugs and gun-running charges.

Police spokesman Karl Angell said 26 civilians were killed and 25 injured in the teeming Tivoli Gardens slum of West Kingston, Coke’s “garrison” stronghold, where US prosecutors say he commands an army of young gunmen.

Many were killed when heavily armed soldiers and police stormed the slum on Monday hunting for Coke. The dead included three members of the security forces.

Angell said police had detained more than 200 people and seized firearms.

US prosecutors have described Coke as the leader of the “Shower Posse,” which murdered hundreds of people by showering them with bullets during the cocaine wars of the 1980s.

Prime Minister Bruce Golding, who declared a state of emergency in two Kingston parishes on Sunday, defended the tough security operation launched in Tivoli Gardens.

“We are facing a crisis … The measures are extraordinary, but they are extraordinary responses to extraordinary actions taken by some,” Golding told parliament. He said the limited state of emergency would remain in force for one month.

Two of the dead civilians were shot dead by suspected supporters of Coke in Spanish Town, 14 miles west of Kingston, late on Monday, authorities said.

The sharply increased death toll followed reports from residents of numerous civilian casualties during Monday’s assault on Tivoli Gardens. Residents complained on Tuesday of being “roughed up” and kept inside their homes by soldiers.

“We are hungry, we have no food and we cannot go outside,” one woman told Reuters by telephone. “Some of us are desperate. Whenever we try to go outside our homes, the soldiers chase us back in and tell us to stay inside,” she said.

“UNDER SIEGE BY CRIMINALS”

Some of the residents had reported military helicopters dropped explosives on the ramshackle slum district on Monday.

Information Minister Daryl Vaz denied this but said the government was determined to fight crime, which has in the past damaged Jamaica’s position as a popular vacation destination for US and European visitors.

“This country is under siege by criminals and the time has come where it is going to be dealt with and this government is prepared to deal with it,” Vaz said.

The violence erupted when suspected gangland supporters of Coke shot up or set fire to five police stations and staged carjackings and looting sprees in downtown Kingston on Sunday.

The unrest, which also disrupted flights in and out of Kingston airport, prompted the US State Department to warn Americans against travel to the city and surrounding areas.

Some business leaders have complained of a sharp hit to tourism. But officials said the violence had had no impact so far on the island’s bauxite, sugar and banana production.

The United States requested Coke’s extradition in August last year but Jamaica initially refused, alleging that evidence against him had been gathered through illegal wiretaps.

An arrest warrant to begin extradition proceedings against Coke was finally issued last week. He was indicted in Manhattan in 2009 on charges of conspiracy to traffic in drugs and guns, charges that carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

He is accused of running a vast smuggling ring that exports cocaine and marijuana to New York and sends guns back to Jamaica. The US indictment alleges that Coke has controlled Tivoli Gardens since the early 1990s and describes the neighborhood as a “garrison” community guarded by armed men who erect barricades and act at his direction.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the United States still hoped to have Coke turned over.

“We filed the extradition request with Jamaica last year and the government has recently decided to arrest him. Obviously they would have to go through a legal process to evaluate whether extradition is appropriate under Jamaican law,” he said.

Drug-linked violence shakes Jamaica capital, 31 dead

Jamaican soldiers and police skirmished on Tuesday with armed supporters of a fugitive alleged drug lord facing U.S. extradition in the third day of violence that has killed 31 people, mostly young civilians.

The sound of intermittent gunfire echoed through parts of the Caribbean tourist island’s capital Kingston, as members of the security forces carried out door-to-door searches for Christopher “Dudus” Coke, 42. The United States is seeking his extradition on drugs and gun-running charges.

Police spokesman Karl Angell said 26 civilians were killed and 25 injured in the teeming Tivoli Gardens slum of West Kingston, Coke’s “garrison” stronghold, where U.S. prosecutors say he commands an army of young gunmen.

Many were killed when heavily armed soldiers and police stormed the slum on Monday hunting for Coke. The dead included three members of the security forces.

Angell said police had detained more than 200 people and seized firearms.

U.S. prosecutors have described Coke as the leader of the “Shower Posse,” which murdered hundreds of people by showering them with bullets during the cocaine wars of the 1980s.

Prime Minister Bruce Golding, who declared a state of emergency in two Kingston parishes on Sunday, defended the tough security operation launched in Tivoli Gardens.

“We are facing a crisis … The measures are extraordinary, but they are extraordinary responses to extraordinary actions taken by some,” Golding told parliament. He said the limited state of emergency would remain in force for one month.

Two of the dead civilians were shot dead by suspected supporters of Coke in Spanish Town, 14 miles (22 km) west of Kingston, late on Monday, authorities said.

The sharply increased death toll followed reports from residents of numerous civilian casualties during Monday’s assault on Tivoli Gardens. Residents complained on Tuesday of being “roughed up” and kept inside their homes by soldiers.

“We are hungry, we have no food and we cannot go outside,” one woman told Reuters by telephone. “Some of us are desperate. Whenever we try to go outside our homes, the soldiers chase us back in and tell us to stay inside,” she said.

“UNDER SIEGE BY CRIMINALS”

Some of the residents had reported military helicopters dropped explosives on the ramshackle slum district on Monday.

Information Minister Daryl Vaz denied this but said the government was determined to fight crime, which has in the past damaged Jamaica’s position as a popular vacation destination for U.S. and European visitors.

“This country is under siege by criminals and the time has come where it is going to be dealt with and this government is prepared to deal with it,” Vaz said.

The violence erupted when suspected gangland supporters of Coke shot up or set fire to five police stations and staged carjackings and looting sprees in downtown Kingston on Sunday.

The unrest, which also disrupted flights in and out of Kingston airport, prompted the U.S. State Department to warn Americans against travel to the city and surrounding areas.

Some business leaders have complained of a sharp hit to tourism. But officials said the violence had had no impact so far on the island’s bauxite, sugar and banana production.

The United States requested Coke’s extradition in August last year but Jamaica initially refused, alleging that evidence against him had been gathered through illegal wiretaps.

An arrest warrant to begin extradition proceedings against Coke was finally issued last week. He was indicted in Manhattan in 2009 on charges of conspiracy to traffic in drugs and guns, charges that carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

He is accused of running a vast smuggling ring that exports cocaine and marijuana to New York and sends guns back to Jamaica. The U.S. indictment alleges that Coke has controlled Tivoli Gardens since the early 1990s and describes the neighborhood as a “garrison” community guarded by armed men who erect barricades and act at his direction.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the United States still hoped to have Coke turned over.

“We filed the extradition request with Jamaica last year and the government has recently decided to arrest him. Obviously they would have to go through a legal process to evaluate whether extradition is appropriate under Jamaican law,” he said.

(Additional reporting by Andy Quinn and Jane Sutton; Writing by Pascal Fletcher and Tom Brown; Editing by Jackie Frank)

Look up and know the air Delhi breathes

New Delhi, May 16 (IANS) Delhiites can now literally know the air they breathe. Come July and LCD (Liquid Crystal Display) boards across the capital will flash hourly data about air quality. These will also give a forecast 24 hours in advance.

Scientists from the Pune-based Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM) have prepared an emissions inventory for the Commonwealth Games. It will prove crucial in managing air quality during the Oct 3-14 event.

The inventory has been prepared using data – number of vehicles, industries, shanties, hotels and restaurants and other sources – collected from near Games venues and the Games Village after a two-month long exercise.

About 250 students from various colleges in Delhi participated in the exercise between February and March. Students, equipped with Click Counters, were positioned at 106 traffic junctions around the venues during the period.

‘For air quality management, we need to know the number of vehicles that use the roads around the Games venues on an average basis daily. We found that at each junction 10,506 vehicles crossed per hour during peak hour while 3,037 vehicles crossed during non-peak hours,’ Gufran Beig, a scientist with IITM’s System of Air Pollution Forecasting and Research (SAFAR), told IANS.

Scientists have also collected emissions data from 70 slum clusters, 881 hotels and restaurants, 5,000 industries and other sources around the Games venue.

The data will act as a baseline emissions inventory for air quality management model SMOKE (Sparse Matrix Operator Kernel Emission).

It is a computer model where data like vehicle numbers, wind speed and humidity will be keyed in and the information will forecast the pollution level 24 hours in advance. The real-time data will help predict air quality 95 percent accurately.

Explaining how the generated data will come handy for air quality forecasting, Beig said: ‘If on a particular day it is found that pollution level is high, we will recommend to the Delhi government to shut some industries or divert traffic near the venues.’

The IITM will put up 16 outdoor LCD boards and six indoor display boards across the capital. There will be different colour codes for the level of pollutants – oxides of nitrogen, carbon monoxide, particulate matter, black carbon and benzene – in the air.

‘At a specific time if the the level of particulate matter or black carbon in the air is high, the display board will show red and if it’s normal it will show green. By seeing the colour codes people will easily come to know about the air quality,’ Beig said.

SAFAR will provide information on air quality within a four-kilometre radius at 11 places around Games venues on an hourly basis.

Some athletes have hinted at skipping the Games as they fear that Delhi’s air is unsafe to breathe. But the Games organising committee says it is committed to ensuring clean air as the event has been dubbed the first-ever Green Games.

The organisers are confident that the existing traffic density can be reduced drastically by providing quality public transport by way of more Metro lines and green buses.

The Indian capital is among the most polluted cities in the world and the ever-growing number of cars, and three- and two-wheelers occupy a staggering 75 percent of road space, although only 20 percent of the commuting public use them.

Delhi has over five million vehicles and another four million come to the metropolis from towns in adjoining states in the National Capital Region (NCR).

The Games organisers are keeping their fingers crossed hoping the scientific methods to improve the quality of air in the capital will succeed.

(Richa Sharma can be contacted at richa.s@ians.in)

Brazil flood death toll rises to 224 – officials

RIO DE JANEIRO, April 11 (Reuters) – The death toll from mudslides and flooding in Brazil’s Rio de Janeiro state has risen to 224, its fire department said on Sunday, about a week after heavy rains began pounding the coastal region.

Authorities reported on Friday up to 212 people had died after the rains — the worst in decades — triggered mudslides and flooding that devastated poor hillside communities and left thousands homeless in and around Brazil’s second-biggest city.

The worst single mudslide occurred Wednesday night when a torrent of mud destroyed houses, stores and churches in a slum built on a former garbage dump in Niteroi, a city located across a bay from Rio.

The Brazilian government has sent troops and allocated 200 million reais ($113 million) to help the state confront the disaster, and the United States said on Friday it was donating $50 million to help the more than 50,000 people made homeless.

Rio’s mayor, Eduardo Paes, signed a decree allowing the city to force residents to leave 158 locations deemed at risk from the disaster. He had already announced that the city would remove between 1,500 and 2,000 families from two slums, prompting resistance from some residents’ groups.

The chaos caused by the rains has renewed attention on Rio’s poor infrastructure and chaotic slums as it prepares to host the soccer World Cup in 2014 and the Summer Olympics in 2016.

($1=1.78 reais)

(Reporting by Pedro Fonseca and Rodrigo Viga Gaier; Writing by Stuart Grudgings and Luciana Lopez; Editing by Paul Simao)

Two kids die as live shell explodes in Panchkula

Panchkula (Haryana), Sep 13 (ANI): At least two children died and five others seriously injured when a shell used by the security forces exploded here at a scrap shop around 11.00 o’clock on Sunday.

The injured were rushed to the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) Hospital in Chandigarh.

The incident occurred when a group of rag picker kids were segregating the collected scrap and they incidentaly pressed one of the live-shells and it exploded at the shop located in a slum in Azad Colony, Sector 21 in Panchkula, around 10 kilometres from Chandigarh.

“It was basically an unexploded shell used by the forces. These are scrap dealers. They bring from somewhere, where they have found. Today, it was hard luck for them. Two (of them) were opening it by putting some force on it. Suddenly, it exploded and some children were also playing that side. Two died on the spot and five of them are seriously injured. They all are being operated,” said Rajesh Kalia, Deputy Superintendent Of Police of Panchkula.

Meanwhile, a local resident said that this was the second time that an explosion had taken place near the scrap dealer’s shop.

“This is the second time a bomb has exploded at the shop. Earlier also, a shell had exploded at the same shop. This shop should be sealed,” said Jagganath, a local. (ANI)

Absence of teachers keeps literacy rate low in Bihar

Patna, Sep 8 (ANI): Even as the world’s observing ‘International Literacy Day’ on Tuesday, Bihar continues to suffer from rampant illiteracy.

Despite the government’s repeated efforts to improve standards of teaching, schools are grappling with a lack of teaching staff and creaking infrastructure.

“We want to increase the number of students in our school, but this is only possible if there are more teachers. We want accommodate 2000 students in the school but we are not able to give admission to the students who come here as there are no teachers and no place to sit,” said Kamlesh Kumar, a teacher.

He added that their school has appealed to the authorities to take a notice of their condition.

The parents prefer keeping their kids at home. They feel that their kids are better at home playing.

“We don’t send our kids to the school because there are no teachers and if there are no teachers what will our kids study in school. That is why the children go to school, play for sometime and come back as there is no one to look after them in the school. Hence, my kids don’t go to the school and play on the streets,” said Mohammad Sarfuddin, a slum dweller.

The eradication of illiteracy has been one of the major programmes of successive Indian governments since independence.

The National Literacy Mission, launched in 1988 by former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s government, has greatly helped in increasing the rate of literacy in the country. Besides the universalisation of primary education, steps were taken to promote adult literacy. (ANI)

Mumbai landslide kills 12

Mumbai, Sep 4 (ANI): Twelve people, including children, were killed and 13 others injured in a landslide in Mumbai on Friday morning.

According to police the incident took place in the suburban Andheri area due to the heavy rain and water logging in the lower areas.

Landslide hit the Lal Bahdur Shastri Nagar slum at Sakinaka early this morning, damaging over 20 houses, Additional Commissioner of Police Amitabh Gupta said.

Mumbai Police have deployed ten fire engines to clear the debris from the spot.

Maharashtra Chief Minister Ashok Chavan has announced a compensation of Rs one lakh to the family members of each of those killed in the landslide.

Chavan has also announced medical aid of Rs.25, 000 and 50,000 to each injured.

The state government has deputed, the Minister of State for Home, Naseem Khan to personally supervise rescue and relief operations. (ANI)

Heavy rains continue to disrupt life in Mumbai

Mumbai, July 15 (ANI): Mumbai and parts of its suburbs continued to receive heavy rainfall on Wednesday morning.

Till 5.30 this morning, the MET department had recorded 77 mm of rainfall at Colaba and 240 mm of rainfall at Santa Cruz.

Water logging was reported from some areas, but road and rail traffic is running normally till now.

As a precautionary measure, people have been warned to leave their houses only if necessary. The incessant showers began on Monday night.

Fishermen have been advised not to venture into the sea.

The MET department has said that the spells of heavy to very heavy rains with strong winds will continue for the next 24 hours.

Meanwhile, heavy overnight rains triggered a landslide near a slum locality in suburban Jogeshwari.

No casualty was reported in the incident at Saripur Nagar on Jogeshwari-Vikhroli Link Road. Operations were on to clear the debris.

Another landslide in Konkan region disrupted traffic on the Sindhudurg-Kolhapur Road.

Meanwhile, the Mithi River, whose flooding had brought Mumbai to a standstill during the deluge in 2005, rose above the danger mark.

The 18-km-long Mithi, which runs through several suburbs, leaves key areas like the airport, Western Express Highway and Bandra-Kurla Complex inundated.

According to municipal officers, about a billion rupees is spent each year on bracing the city for monsoon downpours, yet the rains continue to disrupt normal life. (ANI)

Educational institutions remain shut in Gujarat to condemn hooch tragedy

Ahmedabad, July 10 (ANI): Schools and colleges remained closed in Ahmedabad in Gujarat on Friday as a mark of protest over the death of around 105 people due to consumption of spurious liquor.

Cases of people dying after consuming spurious liquor were reported on Monday and by Thursday (around105 deaths were reported.

Consumption and sale of liquor is officially banned in Gujarat.

Meanwhile, schools and colleges remained closed for the day on Friday. The call for shutdown of educational institutions was given by the students association National Students Union of India (NSUI) and Youth Congress to protest against the alleged lackadaisical role of police and state administration to nab the culprits.

Authorities deployed security personnel outside educational institutions to avoid any kind of mischief.

The students union demanded that the government should go to the root cause of the entire problem and find out from where this spurious liquor is distilled and sourced to various outlets, usually in slum areas.

“The way more than 100 people have died because of hooch tragedy in Gandhi’s Gujarat is really shameful on the part of the state government. Police is supporting the bootleggers because of which poor people are suffering,’ said said Manish Doshi, General Secretary, Youth Congress.

“It’s been three days since the tragedy took place and the government has done nothing. So taking the matter into consideration and taking social and political responsibility, the Youth Congress and NSUI have called for the bandh so that such incidences is not repeated again,” he added.

Illicit liquor, also known as grog or hooch, is a flourishing beverage in India, particularly in states like Gujarat where prohibition is in force.

The illicit liquor is much cheaper as compared to the licensed drinks, which cannot be afforded by most of the people from the poorer sections of society.

In May 2008, at least 180 people had died in Southern Karnataka and Tamil Nadu states due to drinking spurious liquor, considered as one of India’s worst bootlegging tragedies. (ANI)

‘Slumdog’ child star enters his new home in Mumbai

Mumbai, July 8 (ANI): Azharuddin Ismail, child star of the Oscar-winning movie “Slumdog Millionaire” and his family members looked happy as they stepped into their new house in an upmarket Mumbai suburb.

“I am feeling very happy in my new house,” said Ismail.

Ismail and his family moved into the 250 square foot ground floor flat, which is in a modern building complex, with electricity and running water. It is a short drive away from Juhu.

“It’s a very nice house and we are really happy. It’s nice that now our environment would change. We’ll have all the facilities of water and other necessities. I am really thankful to Danny Sir, director of the film that he provided us with a new house,” said Samina Banu, Ismail’s mother.

Ismail got his new home in an upmarket Mumbai suburb on Saturday.

The Jai Ho Trust, named after the film’s award-winning track and set up by the producers, bought the Rs.21 lakh home on Ismail’s behalf and will give it to him when he turns 18.

Ismail’s earlier dwelling, a tarpaulin and sheet hut, was demolished by the civic authorities in May as it was illegal.

The Jai Ho Trust is looking for a house for Ismail’s co-star Rubina Ali, who still lives in a slum with her family. (ANI)

Dhoni’s cricket fans celebrate his birthday in Ranchi

Ranchi, July 7 (ANI): Fans of Indian cricket captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni celebrated his 28th birthday on Tuesday at Mecon Stadium near his residence in Jharkhand capital, Ranchi town.

Dhoni was born in 1981 and grew up in Ranchi. Dhoni was not present in Ranchi, but his fans marked the day by cutting a huge cake and distributing sweets to each other.

Members of the Dhoni Fans Club put up big banners and posters across Ranchi. His well-wishers prayed for his happiness and success.

“First of all, I want to wish him (M S Dhoni) a very Happy Birthday and I wish him all the happiness,” said Anuradha, a female fan of Dhoni.

Jitender Singh, President of Dhoni Fans Club, said that the club would set up a Cricket Academy to felicitate young talents from the slum areas.

“On this occasion we are opening a cricket academy on the way to the airport. We have contacted all the good players of Ranchi and Jharkhand and they have promised to train the young budding players,” Singh said.

“We also have made some special arrangements for the children from slums, who wants to play but due to lack of opportunity fail to do so. We would open a hostel with funds collected by the Dhoni Fans Club wherein all those facilities would be provided to the players,” he added.

Recently, fans had burnt Dhoni’s effigy in Ranchi, blaming him for defending champions India’s humiliating exit from the Twenty20World Cup.

Indian fans singled out Dhoni, hailed as a natural leader since captaining the team to victory in the inaugural Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa, as the villain.

Dhoni was blamed for shuffling the order and failing to shake off his own subdued batting form when a captain’s innings was badly needed. (ANI)

Sustainable development needs to be inclusive: Selja

New Delhi, July 7 (ANI): Union Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation Minister Kumari Selja said on Tuesday that sustainable development needs to be inclusive and different from mere economic development of the past, and its benefits must last well into the next generation, and beyond.

Delivering the inaugural address at the launch of Habitat Business Forum in New Delhi, the minister emphasised the role of private sector in contributing towards this cause has to be recognized and promoted on a large scale.

She also discussed the importance of Non-Government Organizations, saying that they can be very effective agent for building public awareness at the local level, for mobilizing community action, and for voicing local concerns.

Selja also highlighted that capital intensity of urban growth creates divide between the rich and the poor raising prices of basic amenities and making these inaccessible to poor.

The minister said it was critical that cities devise institutional framework for themselves that satisfy the requirements of good urban governance.

She said it is essential that urban local government translate national policies and programmes into local action.

Referring to the Rajiv Awas Yojana, Selja said the scheme is an effort to promote a slum free India in five years, adding that the government would extend support to states that are willing to assign property rights to people living in slum areas.

Rajiv Awas Yojna will offer a ray of hope to slum dwellers and other urban poor to access a decent and dignified living environment and an affordable home. (ANI)

Jinnah’s ‘penniless’ great grandson finally gets his maiden flight

Rawalpindi, June 29 (ANI): Pakistan’s Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s penniless great grandson travelled for the first time on an aeroplane on Sunday.

Aslam Jinnah, who is the son of Jinnah’s niece, got a warm welcome on arrival at the Benazir Bhutto International Airport.

Bait-ul-Maal Managing Director (MD) Zumurrad Khan had invited Aslam Jinnah along with his family for the maiden visit to the federal capital.

Aslam, his wife Suraya Jinnah and 20-year-old handicapped daughter Zanib Jinnah were garlanded, and showered with rose petals as they came out of the VVIP lounge.

Aslam told reporters that he was thankful to God for giving him a chance to see the capital of the country his great grandfather had created in 1947.

With tearful eyes, he said it’s his and the family’s first-ever travel by an airplane and they had never thought of getting such a tremendous welcome at the Benazir Bhutto Shaheed Airport.

Aslam said he didn’t own a house and was leading a miserable life in a Karachi slum before the Bait-ul-Maal recently provided him and the family with basic facilities of life.

The Daily Times quoted Aslam as saying that his family makes plastic bags to earn a living. He said President Asif Zardari had promised to ensure free treatment of his disabled daughter Zainab, 20, in the US.

Bait-ul-Maal Zumurrad Khan said Jinnah’s family was the state’s guest and would stay in Islamabad for a week.

According to him, Aslam Jinnah and family are scheduled to meet Zardari, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and other dignitaries during the stay. He said Jinnah’s family would visit parliament on Monday to meet National Assembly Speaker Fehmida Mirza and other dignitaries. (ANI)

Irate mob attacks police station in New Delhi

New Delhi, June 23(ANI): An infuriated mob attacked a police station in New Delhi on Tuesday following reports of a woman being assaulted by the some police personnel.

The woman, a slum dweller, alleged that she was raped by the Station House Officer and four others in a police station in southwest Delhi and was threatened with dire consequences if she revealed the incident.

Meanwhile, police said they have transferred the investigations to the crime branch and are awaiting the medical report of the victim.

“We are investigating in the matter. But in the meantime the allegations against the SHO (Station House Office) and the local staff of police station Inderpuri the inquiry has been transferred to the crime branch for an impartial inquiry,” said Kannan Jagadeeshan, deputy commissioner of police, southwest Delhi.

“The SHO has been transferred to the district, till the completion of the inquiry by the crime branch. According to the facts that come out of the inquiry, the investigation will take place further,” he added. (ANI)

Bandra Fire – Fire in Bandra Slums – Fire in Garibnagar Area – Bandra

Bandra Fire – Fire in Bandra Slums – Fire in Garibnagar Area – Bandra

MUMBAI: A fire broke out in a slum adjoining the suburban Bandra railway station in Mumbai in the wee hours on Thursday, leaving 15 people injured and gutting about 200 shanties.

The fire broke out around 0400 hours in the Garibnagar area, disaster management officials said, adding the cause is yet to be ascertained.

“Twenty five fire engines, 16 water tankers and four ambulances were sent to the spot to aide fire fighting operations. So far about 14-15 people have sustained injuries and two have been admitted to Bhabha hospital in Bandra,” they said.

The fire is still to be put out but officials said the situation is under control.

Train services on the Western Railway were largely unaffected by the fire.

- TimesofIndia

Amritsar girl transforming lives of neglected children

Amritsar, May 30 (ANI): Many children of rickshaw-pullers, domestic helps, migrant labourers, and single or abandoned mothers in Amritsar have found an unusually young guardian who wants to transform their lives.

At first sight, the 22-year-old Pearl Jasra looks a bubbly, vivacious and the girl next-door. However, there is much more to her.

After losing her mother when she was just 12 and her father soon after, Jasra, made up her mind to develop strength and grit in life and help others like her.

Today, this orphan girl, is motivating and shaping up careers of various deprived children. It is because of her initiative that these once neglected children in Amritsar today have something to smile about.

“The people in urban society still look down upon the backward classes. Nobody cares about their needs and expectations from life. They also want to play with toys, go out and wear good clothes. The urban society has never lent a helping hand to them in their studies and education. Their attitude is changing,” said Pearl Jasra, who runs a special school for about children.

She enjoys teaching children about numbers, reciting poems and celebrating their birthdays and other festivals with them.

It is a gala time when about 92 children converge at her house in the evening to get their homework and share their feelings.

With the little resources that she has and her uncle’s help, Pearl persuaded some affluent families of the city to financially support children’s education.

Five years ago, she decided to organize the set up– Initiative for Viable Education.

Children, belonging to underprivileged class, comprising house maids, rickshaw-pullers and daily wage labourers, have been coming to her in increasing numbers.

Most of them are illiterate and come from a slum colony, located near her house. She carefully monitors their homework adding special emphasis on improving their communication skills.

Her organization, Initiative for Viable Education, has identified many families, comprising widows and other underprivileged, who would like to send their children to schools.

“She is doing a good work by helping poor people. There is nobody to teach them and her job is totally humanitarian. She even teaches kids who are poor and deprived,” said Tarachand, a local resident.

Her story finds a display in the K S Durlabhji calendar for 2009, published from Jaipur in Rajasthan. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

Danny Boyle buys new home for homeless Azharuddin Ismail

Washington, May 28 (ANI): Slumdog Millionaire director Danny Boyle has come to the rescue of childstars Azharuddin Ismail and Rubina Ali after they were left homeless following a slum clearing drive by Mumbai authorities.

Boyle has bought a new home for Ismail, who played young Salim in the Oscar winning film, and is planning to do the same for Rubina.

After the huge success of Slumdog Millionaire, the film bosses had established the Jai Ho Trust last year (08) to help fund their education.

However, the kids’ recent plight compelled Boyle and producer Christian Colson to fly to Mumbai this week to see how they could help the young stars.

At a meeting in the city’s JW Marriott hotel, Boyle announced he’s purchased a new home for Ismail and is planning to do the same to put a roof over Ali’s head too.

“The homes are a concern. That is one of the reasons why we built the trust,” Contactmusic quoted Boyle as saying.

A spokesman for the Jai Ho Trust describes Ismail’s new apartment as “comfortable, in a good neighbourhood (and) near his school”, with the property costing “upwards of two million rupees” – 42,000 dollars. (ANI)

Sick Rubina Ali spends night on hospital floor

London, May 23 (ANI): ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ child star Rubina Ali had to spend a night sleeping on the floor of an Indian hospital after her slum home was bulldozed.

The nine-year-old star suffered from flu after spending two days homeless on the streets of Mumbai.

She was taken to the nearby Bhaba hospital, but because there were no beds left she had to lie in the arms of her aunt Mohidin on the floor.

“Rubina was out in the hot sun when they knocked down our home and then was exposed to the humid night,” the Sun quoted dad Rafiq Qureshi as saying.

“It was extremely stressful for all my family and I am not surprised that this caught up with my daughter,” he added.

However, Rubina has been discharged from hospital and is currently staying in a cramped house. (ANI)

‘Slumdog millionaire’s child star loses shanty home in demolition

Mumbai, May 20 (ANI): Shanty home of Oscar winning film Slumdog Millionaire’s child star Rubina Ali was brought down by the civic authorities in Mumbai, an action which brought her family on road months after gaining a global appreciation.

Rubina’s house in a teeming slum was one of several settlements that were demolished by local authorities in Mumbai.

Rubina was out with her aunt when the civic authority workers and the police landed at their house and asked them to vacate their house. Her father, when tried to protest the demolishing workers, was allegedly beaten up with sticks.

“My father tried to intervene and asked them how they can demolish our houses without even giving us notices, then they beat my father with sticks. My father had to go to the dispensary as his hand was swollen. These people continued demolishing our houses,” Rubina said.

According to the slum dwellers, they had been living there for past many years and the authorities had not given them any prior notice before carrying out the demolition work.

“The government and the politicians all know that poor people live here, the police should not trouble the poor like us… Why do they trouble us? We have been living here for many years,” said Munni Qureshi, Rubina’s mother.

Eight-year-old Rubina played baby Latika, the film’s heroine, in the rags-to-riches romance about a poor Indian boy competing for love and money on a television game show.

Earlier this year, there was an outcry after pictures emerged of “Slumdog Millionaire’s” child stars living in squalor despite the movie’s box-office success and eight Academy Awards.

The film also sparked controversy for its name, deemed by some to be offensive to slum dwellers, and its treatment of the cast. Its depiction of the lives of poor Indians was dubbed “poverty porn” by sections of the media.

In February, the housing authority of Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital, said they would give Rubina Ali and fellow child star Ismail new houses. (ANI)

Oscar winning sound mixer of ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ meets slum kids in Delhi

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): The street kids of New Delhi had a rendezvous with Oscar winning sound mixer of ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ Resul Pookutty here last evening.

Continuing his association with the rags to riches Oscar winning flick, Resul interacted with the homeless kids as part of the initiative of a self-help group ‘Butterflies India’, working for the cause of street children.

Resul posed for photographs and also chatted up the kids.

“It feels great because I have come here to spend time with them and to see how they are. So, it is also an attempt to bring the marginalized people in the forefront. Its time for change,” said Resul.

Winning an Oscar has changed the life of this small town sound mixer who shared the Sound Mixing Oscar with Ian Tapp and Richard Pryke for his work in the Danny Boyle’s film “Slumdog Millionaire”.

Post Slumdog Millionaire, work has started pouring in for Resul from both Indian and international filmmakers.

“Slumdog Millionaire”, a rags-to-riches story of a Mumbai slum dweller, who goes on to win 20 million dollars in a quiz show, was adjudged the best film.

“Slumdog Millionaire” was nominated for 10 Oscars, including best picture and best director. It already has won at the Golden Globes, the Screen Actors Guild, and the British BAFTA awards.

AR Rahman and Resul Pookutty won three Oscars for India as the “Slumdog Millionaire” juggernaut swept the annual Hollywood awards.

It also fetched Danny Boyle the Best Director award, Simon Beaufoy best Adapted Screenplay and Anthony Dod Mantle the best Cinematography award. The film was also awarded for Best Editing. (ANI)