Seniors suffer most in this society and there is little care once you attain 60 plus age and retire from service. You are dependent on your children for finances and also face many problems. At home, you are treated as a liability and used for taking some unwanted work. And if you go to bank for withdrawing your pension, then the staff curse at you saying that trouble “T” has come. Keeping all this in view, seniors think about living independently by staying in old age homes, ashrams or community centre and spend their old age in peace and harmony.
When you are at the wrong side of your life, one has to face more and more problems. First and foremost is health problem and you find that the medical facility available is not adequate and the medicines cost very high. If you stay with the family and let alone during day time then there is a distinct possibility of getting attacked by miscreants. Even while travelling by bus you feel the pinch of climbing the stairs at a height and you are made to struggle every time you venture out. User friendly bus service is not available as well in the city. Even the public convenience available is not meant for seniors as you will have to crawl to attend nature’s call.
The senior community is not expecting much from the government but only want a decent living. For that the Government should be able to help the seniors in providing funds for medical facility at concessional rates and make them comfortable at all levels. Police department on their part should be able to give them protection and see that safety of seniors is ensured without giving scope for lapse on their part. A cheerful life at the fag end of the career is all that is required and that end should be met in the best way possible. The ultimate wish is that the seniors are respected well in society as the present generation will also become seniors one day and will have to undergo all the trouble when they grow old.
Sofia Vergara says she wants her wedding cake to be the highlight of her marriage. When asked how long it will take her to get fully dolled up on her big day, the 43-year-old Sofia Vergara, who will be starring on the cover page of Martha Stewart Weddings, said she has planned everything out and it will take her two hours, reports E! Online.
Giving an insight into what she wants her nuptials to be about, the ‘Modern Family’ star said that she wants a wedding where the guests have fun as it is about creating memories.
Caitlyn Jenner recently revealed that her sons Brody, Brandon and Burt have supported her famous Vanity Fair cover and believes that their mother’s shoot was very sexy.
Caitlyn Jenner, whose famous cover was clicked by renowned photographer Annie Leibovitz, said that to her pal Candis Cayne that her kids have appreciated her cover shoot, E! Online reports.
The 65-year-old Caitlyn Jenner added, “A couple of the kids thought that the Vanity Fair shoot was a little too sexy.”
Previously, Caitlyn Jenner had stripped down to a figure-hugging corset to appear on the front cover of the glossy magazine.
Stand-up comedian-actress Amy Schumer “doesn’t know” if she wants to continue with movies.
The 34-year-old comic whose performance is her debut film “Trainwreck” earned rave reviews feels she may continue with her comedy series as she does not like the audition process, reported Empire magazine.
“I don’t know if I want to be in movies. It’s like this. You read a script and it says, ‘She’s pretty, but not gorgeous, the funniest person in the room.’
“Then you go in and the casting director says, ‘Wow that was good.’ Then your agent says, ‘They loved you’ then you call a week later and say, ‘Have we heard anything?’ and they say, ‘No but you’re still in the mix.'” Schumer said.
“Then you forget about it and that summer you see the role is being played by Jessica Biel,” she added.
Apart from going back to her her comedy series, Schumer, 34, also has some other career options in mind.
“You know, I’m thinking of going to dental school,” she said.
Actress Preity Zinta says the only actor who can make her cry during an emotional scene is superstar Shah Rukh Khan.
“The only actor who can make me cray at the drop of a hat in an emotion scene is @iamsrk omg! I have cried in so many scenes with him,” Preity, who has worked with SRK in movies like ‘Dil Se’, ‘Veer Zaara’ and ‘Kal Ho Naa Ho’ wrote on micro-blogging website Twitter.
The actress, who has completed 17 years of her career in Bollywood, also wrote about her fellow co-stars in a question and answer session with fans on Twitter.
The bubbly actress revealed that she was “scared” of ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’ actor Salman Khan before sharing screen space with him.
“The only actor I used to be scared of before I worked with him was @BeingSalmanKhan I don’t know why but I was,” she wrote.
The actress said that during the shooting of ‘Dil Chahta Hai’, her co-star Aamir Khan made a prank on her.
“@aamir_khan poured water in my mouth while I was sleeping with my mouth open in ‘Dil Chahta Hai’. In the bus I choked, socked him and then laughed,” she wrote.
The ‘Salaam Namaste’ actress also wrote that she shared the “greatest chemistry” with ‘Chori Chori Chupke Chupke’ co-star Rani Mukerjee.
“Of all my co-stars, my best co-star award goes to the one and only Rani Mukerji. She is a pleasure to work with and we had the greatest chemistry.”
The 40-year-old actress also shared a trivia from the film ‘Sangharsh’, where she said that she “chipped” her teeth and “broke” her leg in “the climax scene”.
Bollywood diva Priyanka Chopra who is gearing up for her debut in international TV series ‘Quantico’ amazed Sunny Leone with her popularity.
‘Hate Story 2’ star Sunny took to Twitter to express why she is so proud of dusky beauty Priyanka.
Priyanka, in response thanked the actress. Check out the Tweets below: @priyankachopra omg just got back to LA and you are everywhere I am driving! You get it girl!! #proudindian
Actor Sushant Singh Rajput says he made many “fervent attempts” to impress girls in school by mouthing Shah Rukh Khan’s dialogues from iconic romantic film “Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge”.
The “Byomkesh Bakshy” actor, who is dating his “Pavitra Rishta” co-star Ankita Lokhande, said it took him more than three attempts to get the famous “Palat…” dialogue right.
“Watching #DDLJ again & can’t stop smiling… My fervent attempts to imitate and get @iamsrk dialogues correct to impress girls in school.
“‘Agar woh mujhse pyaar karti hai, to paltegi. Palat… Palat… Palat’. It took me much more than 3 attempts to actually make it work,” he posted on Twitter.
The actor shared few other dialogues too from the Shah Rukh-Kajol starrer 1995 film, which completed a successful run of 1000 weeks at a theatre in Mumbai.
Sushant, 29, is currently shooting for Indian cricketer MS Dhoni biopic, where he is playing the titular character.
According to BCCI secretary Anurag Thakur “cricket and terrorism” cannot go hand-in-hand as Pakistan is not serious about dismantling terror network.
Political tension between India and Pakistan is taking a heavy toll on cricketing ties between both the nations. Even though experts say that cricket should not suffer due to politics but the reverse is true. The Gurdaspur terror attack incident and the cancellation of Indo-Pakistan dialogue at NSA level has put question mark over the Pakistan’s home series against India. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) secretary Anurag Thakur said there will be no revival of cricketing relations between India and Pakistan if Islamabad harbours Dawood Ibrahim and continues dialogue with Hurriyat leaders.
“Dawood in Karachi. National Security Agency (NSA) wants to meet separatists here. Are you really serious about peace and you expect we’ll play cricket with you?” Thakur said in a twitter message.
Thakur’s statement comes a day after the scheduled talks between the national security advisers (NSAs) of the two neighbours were called off.
Earlier this week, Thakur had cited firing altercations between Pakistan and India along the Line of Control and Working Boundary as the reason for not playing with Pakistan, saying “cricket and terrorism” cannot go hand-in-hand.
“Peace on the borders is essential for a cricket match between India and Pakistan and no cricket match is possible under the shadow of unprovoked firing and bombardment at the border,” said Thakur.
“On one hand there is a rise in terrorist activity from Pakistan. On the other, you can’t expect to play a cricket series with Pakistan. For me, the safety and security of my countrymen is more important than a cricket series” he said.
“This is not the way to go ahead. I was never against the dialogue process. At the same time, if you do not have good relations, you can’t have good cricket” he added.
According to the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed by both the nations, India was expected to play an away series against Pakistan in UAE.
PCB has time and again offered to keep politics and cricket aside and even some players have echoed the board’s sentiments. Test captain Misbahul Haq said Pakistan and India should be playing against each other in bilateral series regularly and playing cricket should not be linked to the overall political relations between the two nations.
However, the BCCI has always left matters to be handled by their government.
Since 2007 no cricket series between Pakistan and India could be possible due to tension over the LOC. Pakistan did play two T20 and 3 ODI’s in 2012-13 with India on the Indian grounds but it didn’t bring financial benefit to PCB.
PCB was trying its level best to hold a complete series with India in December 2015 in order to fill its bags and negotiations were going on between the boards of two countries from the last few months. Sheharyar Khan himself went to New Delhi and signed a MOU as well in this regard but this didn’t work even.
Pakistani Test captain Misbah-ul-Haq had expressed a desire to retire from the game after taking on India for one last time.
“If the series against India happens, I want to play that series and probably retire from international cricket. So the India series can be my last one,” Misbah said.
On Saturday, a newspaper and channel came out with proofs to show that Pakistan is providing a haven for Dawood, the mastermind of the 1993 Mumbai blasts.
Meanwhile a telephone bill and a passport form the documentary evidence which indicate that Dawood Ibrahim and his family are in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi.
Indian security agencies are said to be in possession of a telephone bill issued in the name of Mehjabeen Shaikh, Dawood’s wife. The bill mentions D-13, Block 4, Karachi Development Authority, Sch 5, Clifton, as the address, and is issued by the Pakistan Telecommunications Company Limited.
The passport has a recent image of Dawood, which shows him now to be clean shaven and with a receding hairline. He is said to be 59 years old now.
In 2013 when UPA was ruling government, Indian economy faced one of its worst crises in the decade and now same story is repeated in 2015 too when BJP is in power. While that is worrying the political and economic fraternity, what is worrying ordinary Indians are the price of onions. People in India eat their way through 15 million tonnes of onions a year. Almost every dish uses it, whether cooked in a curry or eaten raw as an accompaniment to a meal. The onion has proven as a political game-changer time and again.
When UPA was in power, one of the members of the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), Vijay Jolly, gifted bags of onions instead of sweets for the Raksha Bandhan. Many BJP leaders protested in front of 7, RCR then PM Manmohan Singh’s residence. There was huge uproar and instability by BJP. Now, when they are in power, they are running without any explanation. Onion prices have been known to swing earlier also before elections. In 1998, the then-ruling BJP suffered heavy losses in Delhi state elections, a result widely blamed on high onion prices.
The worried Delhi state government has started special counters across the city, to sell subsidized onions. But security guards have been deployed here too, to control angry crowds. A month ago, one kilogram of onions would have cost about Rs. 20. Since then, the price has gone up nearly five-fold, costing up to Rs. 80 and stinging everyone in India. The reason for the price hike is lack of stocks, after a drought hit crops and average rains.
Onions are considered as an indispensable ingredient in most of the Indian cooking, providing the pungent foundation for thousands types of curries and other dishes. Onion prices have been an important political issue; it was regarded as the decisive factor in the 1998 state elections in Delhi and Rajasthan, and was responsible for bringing down the central government in 1980. India is the second largest onion producer in the world, after China. A gap in coordination between the demand and the supply-management chain exacerbates the problem. In every couple of years, we will be kicking out governments for rising onion prices because till the mismatch continues such crises will recur. New Delhi is now ready to import onions from countries like Pakistan and China, in order to meet the country’s insatiable demand. However, it’s only a stopgap solution. Until infrastructure, distribution and technology improve, and wastage is reduced, governments may find their fates depend on this pungent bulb and Indian shoppers will have plenty to cry about.
Forty-five per cent of the onion produce in India comes from the states of Maharashtra and Karnataka. In November 2010, unseasonal and excessive rainfall in onion-producing regions such as Nashik in Maharashtra delayed the arrival of onions in markets. In December, when fresh crop usually begins to arrive, onion shipments were reduced from 2000-3000 tonnes a day to 700-800 tonnes a day in New Delhi markets, raising the price of onion from Rs. 35 to Rs. 88 per kg in the period of one week.
Prices of onion in the capital continue to remain at an eye watering Rs. 70-80 per kg, but it’s not the shortage of supply that’s pushing up prices so dramatically. Supply of onions in Delhi mandis has in fact increased significantly in the past 4-5 days but it has not brought down prices, indicating how traders are exploiting the crisis to make a quick buck.
With the bulbs in short supply and prices soaring high in domestic market, the vegetable dealers here have started importing onions, the most versatile veggie staple in the kitchen, from Afghanistan even as Pakistan government has imposed a ban on export of onions since home prices of onions have already peaked to Rs. 3500 for one hundred kilogram in wholesale market. Vegetable dealers now getting only six to eight truckloads of Afghan onions to meet the local demand but the quality of onion is very poor. Presently, the onion exported to India was produced in Kabul but according to Afghan traders in two weeks’ time onion crop from Mazar-e-Sharif would arrive in market which was of better quality. In Amritsar wholesale vegetable market Afghan onion was sold for Rs. 15 to Rs. 25 a kilogram and was largely purchased by hotels, dhabas and restaurant owners whereas Indian onion was still in demand for domestic use. In retail, Indian onion was being sold for Rs. 45 to Rs. 55 per kilogram but the sales have declined in past one week. Onion has always brought tears to the government. Let’s see, how BJP will deal with this crisis.
Bolstered by the Bombay High Court order overturning ban on Maggi, Nestle India plans to bring back the popular instant noodles back in the market by end of this year subject to certain clearances.
The company, which has taken a hit of Rs. 450 crore, including destroying over 30,000 tonnes of the instant noodles since June when it was banned because of alleged excessive lead content, says it will continue with the existing formula of the product and not change the ingredients.
“We will try and target something that is better than that. My desire is to do it before that but let’s see,” Nestle India Managing Director Suresh Narayanan told in an interaction when asked whether Maggi noodles could be back in the market by start of the next year.
He said as per court directives, this quarter it would go in for testing of Maggi samples at three independent laboratories in Punjab, Hyderabad and Jaipur which are accredited with National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories (NABL).
“By the time we get everything done (all clearances), it will be middle of September. I can tell you this quarter no, unlikely. Subsequent quarter, we will try (to bring back Maggi),” Narayanan said.
He said the company has to test the Maggi samples within six weeks and after that it would start manufacturing and then the noodles would be tested again.
Asked whether the recent problems would make the company change ingredients of the instant noodles, Narayanan replied in the negative saying “what has worked for 30 years” must work in future too, although the company would continue to work on innovation and add more variants in future.
Acknowledging that the ban has ‘dented’ the company, Narayanan said the company has to win back consumer confidence and will “spend aggressively” on rebuilding the brand from a “zero” level through customer engagement activities and advertisements.
When asked if the company would consider seeking damages from food regulators on the back of Bombay High Court judgement, Narayanan remained non-committal said the company’s focus would be to bring back Maggi as soon as possible, look ahead and move on while working together with authorities.
The Consumer Affairs Ministry has filed a class action suit against Nestle India seeking about Rs. 640 crore in damages for alleged unfair trade practices, false labeling and misleading advertisements.
It was for the first time that the ministry dragged a company to the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) using a provision in the nearly three-decade-old Consumer Protection Act.
Narayanan said the company was confident of defending itself as it has done in the Bombay High Court, which lifted the ban imposed by food regulators on Maggi noodles while ordering a fresh test of samples in three independent laboratories across India.
Nestle India had reported a standalone loss of Rs. 64.40 crore for the quarter ended June 30, 2015, its first quarterly loss in over three decades. It had posted a net profit of Rs. 287.86 crore during the April-June quarter of FY 2014-15.
On questions raised by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) that why did Nestle destroy Maggi if it was safe and not export it, he said: “There was some confusion in the mind of consumers. We took a call that consumer trust is most important for us, we will withdraw everything. Once you withdraw what do you do? Either you change the packaging and put it back in the market or you destroy it.”
He said a lot of consumers at some stage had started asking the question about monosodium glutamate (MSG) as to whether it is an added chemical or does it occur naturally.
“We explained that glutamic acid naturally exists in a lot of food products. We don’t add it as a chemical or additive,” he said.
The company had removed ‘no added MSG’ label from its packs when the controversy broke out in June.
On allegations of difference in Maggi’s export and domestic consumption quality, Narayanan said: “Difference in exported product and Indian product is only of packaging. It is very difficult to export (Maggi meant for consumption in India) as the packaging is different in every country.”