Nine people including CDS Bipin Rawat and his wife left Delhi at around 9 am on Wednesday by a special aircraft and reached Air Force Station Sulur at around 11.35 am. After about 10 minutes, at 11:45 am, 9 people from Delhi and five crew members i.e., a total of 14 people left for Wellington Army Camp by helicopter from Air Force Station Sulur.
At around 12.20 pm, the helicopter full of 14 people crashed in the Kattariya area of Nachapa Chatram, while it was descending to make the planned landing at Wellington. The helicopter had travelled about 94 km after taking off from Air Force Station Sulur when it crashed in the Kattariya area. There was only a distance of about 16 km between the crash site and the destination of the helicopter. That is, 16 kilometres before the Wellington Army Camp, CDS Rawat’s helicopter became a victim of the accident. If the helicopter had flown for 5 more minutes, he would have reached his destination, but on the way, there was an accident.
General Rawat has had an illustrious career in the defense services spanning over four decades that saw him rising in ranks to be appointed the first joint chief of the tri-services. The CDS is a one-point advisor to the government on matters related to the military and functions with the main aim of integrating the three services – the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force. He was appointed the 27th Chief of the Army Staff in 2016 amid a controversy over his seniority. He had superseded two senior officers to occupy the Army chief’s position. He then rose to become the CDS in 2019. The government had amended the Army rules to extend the age of superannuation from 62 years to 65 years, paving the way for his appointment to the post.
He is credited with being instrumental in reducing militancy in Northeast India. The 2015 cross-border operation into Myanmar in which the Indian Army successfully responded to an ambush by NSCN-K militants was conducted under his supervision. He was also part of the planning for the 2016 surgical strikes, in which the Indian Army went across the Line of Control into Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and conducted an airstrike on a Jaish-e-Mohammad terror training camp in Pakistan’s Balakot. General Rawat was reportedly monitoring the developments from South Block in New Delhi.
General Rawat was a veteran in counterinsurgency and high-altitude warfare, having served in difficult terrains including the Northern and Eastern commands. He has also served as General Officer Commanding-in-Chief (GOC-C) Southern Command. During his long career, he served across the country in various roles. He commanded a company in Uri, Jammu and Kashmir. As a Colonel, he commanded the 5th battalion 11 Gorkha Rifles in the Eastern sector along the Line of Actual Control at Kibithu in Arunachal Pradesh. As a Brigadier, he commanded 5 Sector of Rashtriya Rifles in Sopore, Kashmir. He has also been part of the United Nations Peacekeeping Force and has commanded a multinational brigade in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where he was twice awarded the Force Commander’s Commendation.
General Rawat has been decorated with many honours for his service, including the Param Vishisht Seva Medal, Uttam Yudh Seva Medal, Ati Vishisht Seva Medal, Vishisht Seva Medal, Yudh Seva Medal, and Sena Medal.
General Rawat is an alumnus of the St Edward School in Shimla and the National Defense Academy, Khadakwasla. He was commissioned in the Fifth Battalion of the Eleven Gorkha Rifles in December 1978 from the Indian Military Academy in Dehradun. He was a recipient of the prestigious “Sword of Honour”. General Rawat also attended the Command and General Staff College (CGSC) course at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, USA.
Rawat was born in Pauri, modern-day Uttarakhand, on 16 March 1958 into a Hindu family. His family had been serving in the Indian Army for multiple generations. His father Laxman Singh Rawat was from Sainj village of the Pauri Garhwal district and rose to the rank of Lieutenant-General. His mother was from the Uttarkashi district and was the daughter of Kishan Singh Parmar, the ex-Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) from Uttarkashi.
Rawat was also a graduate of the Defence Services Staff College (DSSC), Wellington and the Higher Command Course at the United States Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. From his tenure at the DSSC, he obtained an MPhil degree in Defence Studies as well as a diploma in Management and Computer Studies from the University of Madras. In 2011, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by CCS University, Meerut for his research on military media strategic studies.
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Pandhari Village School, a ZP school in a small village located near Aurangabad city successfully set up a library in their school campus. The Nabhangan foundation completed this task with the help of locals. The Nabhangan foundation has been working in the development of various schools for the past many years and aims to develop various such projects in other schools as well.
The founder of Nabhangan Foundation Rajshri Deshpande said, “Finally another dream came true with “Satyadev Dubey Vachanalay”. We completed a beautiful library in our Pandhari village school. Team Nabhangan foundation has been working in the Pandhari village on water, healthcare and education for 7 years. After getting permission from ZP to build an eco-sensitive school, we decided that this school will be a colourful one and will have art, craft, science and sports as an integral part of their life. Theatre and literature is an important aspect for each human being and we wanted that to start in villages from a young age.”
The library is named after Late Pandit Satyadev Dubey Ji who had inspired the village with his contribution to theatre and films. Theatre will now be an integral part of the village they stated.
“We want to empower our villages with rich literature from across the world.”
This is our first library model. One side is a library bookshelf and the other side is a huge blackboard for our village kids to paint, a huge wooden bench and a beautiful roof to protect from sun and rain. This is not only for our kids, this will be for our villagers too. There will be a section in this library which will be dedicated especially to all the adults from the village.
“This library model will be replicated in our other villages too. And Every library will be dedicated to our contemporary Hero’s, feminists, activists, dignitaries, scientists, mathematicians, sportspersons and all those people who inspired us, motivated us, who spread kindness and happiness in this world”, the foundation added.
The library is also unique and sustainable. “It all started with my father saying when there is a bus stop in each village then there should be a library stop too. Every time you cannot dedicate a huge room for a library because that’s not sustainable, especially in villages. So you need one dedicated space just for the library. I shared his vision with the amazing Architect duo Yatindra Patil and Vijay Karade then immediately they said yes and started doing research on designs. Then Rahul Deshpande helped us finalise who had designed the play area in our Pandhari village school.”
Further, they also thanked Sunil Shanbag and the farmers of the Pandhari village for their support and love.
The wedding and vacation season is here. All of us are ready to enjoy the big fat Indian weddings after a long pandemic period. For most of us, the number one reason to attend weddings is the delicious food. The best delicacies to be served on our platter. Not to forget, this season is a fascinating one for those who die for some gossip. These are the people, who rather than relaxing or taking a vacation by themselves, love to spend time stalking and following others’ lives. Not just from Bollywood, but today every person from the glam world makes headlines. Indians seem to be over-obsessed with bikinis, brides and baby bumps.
December is here, soon Instagram will flood with celebrities’ pictures from Goa, Mauritius, Bali, Thailand, and of course, Maldives. Then we will obsess over them for days. Scroll down the numerous memes made on them. And, end up being bored and disappointed. Actors will post their beach pictures in bikinis and half of the internet will go crazy looking at the ‘perfect’ body shape while the rest half will just stare creepily at it.
Virat-Anushka’s, Ranveer-Deepika’s were some of the over-hyped weddings in Bollywood. In recent times, Vicky Kaushal and Katrina Kaif kept their love story away from the world. Though, their wedding news is already doing rounds on social media in the form of memes and pictures. It takes no time for trolls to perform their job. Just a matter of time and we’ll get to see reels with clips from their wedding with ‘Din Shagna Da’ playing in the background. For those who desperately want to see their wedding, here’s some good news. They have decided to live stream their wedding on Amazon Prime.
Another such hot topic is celebrity’s kids and baby bumps. Probably, we all remember the famous black dress with white polka dots that Anushka Sharma wore in a picture showing her baby bump. Coincidentally, a few more celebrities’ pictures flaunting their baby bump in similar dresses were seen on social media. We still remember these minor details; this is the level of hype that is created.
How much is a picture worth? In the B-town, the highest amount for a photograph is paid not for the Kapoors, for actresses, or shirtless photographs. Taimur Ali Khan, the munchkin who himself might not be aware of it, is the answer to this question. Back in 2018, the paparazzi revealed that Taimur Ali Khan’s picture tops the list for Rs. 1500/- per picture. Karan Johar also confirmed stating that his picture is probably traded for a much higher price.
Often the media is blamed for covering their issues overly. The media goes over the fence sometimes and makes a big fuss over it. But there’s another side to the coin. We fail to understand that there is a high demand for such news in the public. Only if there is a demand, then can such news survive.
Right to Privacy listed under article 21 of the Indian constitution seems to be forbidden for celebrities. There have been several times when the paparazzi have gone to extreme levels. By following celebrities, breaking into their private spaces, etc. without their wish. This distracts the lay public from other issues and showcases it as the only important thing.
(The views expressed by the author in the article are his/her own)
The CM Assistance Fund is used primarily to provide financial assistance to the public during medical and natural disasters. However, out of the total deposit of Rs 130 crore, only Rs 31 crore has been spent so far and the balance is Rs 99 crore, the Chief Minister’s Secretariat has informed RTI Activist Anil Galgali.
◆ Rs 31 crore is spent, Rs 99 crore in the balance
◆ Financial assistance to an average of 8 citizens per day
◆ Distributed Rs 22 crore to 4932 citizens in 22 months for medical purposes
◆ 9 crore, financial assistance to the heirs of those killed in natural calamities and accidents
Anil Galgali, an RTI Activist, filed an RTI query to the Chief Minister’s Secretariat about the amount deposited in the Chief Minister’s care Fund, the amount spent and the balance. The Chief Minister’s Secretariat Assistance Fund cell informed Anil Galgali that Rs 130 crore has been deposited in the main fund of the Chief Minister’s Assistance Fund from November 28, 2019, to date.
The Chief Minister’s card Fund (Main Fund) has provided financial assistance of Rs. 9 crores to the heirs of those killed in natural calamities and accidents. 22 crore has been distributed to 4932 citizens for medical purposes. The Chief Minister’s Assistance Fund (Main Fund) has a total balance of Rs. 99 crores for medical and natural calamities as of September 30, 2021. From 28th November 2019 to 30th September 2021, financial assistance has been distributed in 33 cases from the Chief Minister’s Assistance Fund.
According to Anil Galgali, medical aid needs to be maximized through the Chief Minister’s Assistance Fund. At present, an average of 8 citizens are being financed every day.
Chief of Defence Staff, General Bipin Rawat, his wife and 11 others were killed in a helicopter crash near Coonoor in Tamil Nadu on Wednesday.
The copter carrying Gen Rawat and his entourage crashed in apparently foggy conditions, killing the 13 people on board, the IAF and other officials said. One person survived the crash and is being treated at a hospital.
“With deep regret, it has now been ascertained that Gen Bipin Rawat, Mrs Madhulika Rawat and 11 other persons on board have died in the unfortunate accident,” the IAF said in a tweet.
With deep regret, it has now been ascertained that Gen Bipin Rawat, Mrs Madhulika Rawat and 11 other persons on board have died in the unfortunate accident.
Rawat was on a visit to Defence Services Staff College (DSSC), Wellington to address the faculty and student officers of the staff course when the fatal mishap happened.
Group Captain Varun Singh SC, Directing Staff at DSSC and the sole survivor, was undergoing treatment for injuries at the Miltary Hospital, Wellington, IAF added.
“Deeply anguished by the sudden demise of Chief of Defence Staff Gen Bipin Rawat, his wife and 11 other Armed Forces personnel in an extremely unfortunate helicopter accident today in Tamil Nadu. His untimely death is an irreparable loss to our Armed Forces and the country,” Defence Minister Rajnath Singh tweeted.
“General Rawat had served the country with exceptional courage and diligence. As the first Chief of Defence Staff he had prepared plans for jointness of our Armed Forces,” Singh added.
Deeply anguished by the sudden demise of Chief of Defence Staff Gen Bipin Rawat, his wife and 11 other Armed Forces personnel in an extremely unfortunate helicopter accident today in Tamil Nadu.
His untimely death is an irreparable loss to our Armed Forces and the country.
Earlier, the Nilgiris Collector SP Amrith confirmed to PTI that 13 persons were killed in the crash while there was one survivor. The IAF said a Court of Inquiry has been ordered into the accident, involving a Mi-17VH helicopter that took off from the Sulur IAF Station in nearby Coimbatore.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh briefed Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi about the crash and the IAF chief has been asked to reach the site.
Singh also visited the residence of Rawat in the national capital and spoke to his daughter.
The mortal remains of Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat and his wife along with other Armed Forces personnel killed in the chopper crash expected to arrive in Delhi by today evening.
Recently I have witnessed someone close to me going to jail for using a ‘fake degree’ to practice at one of the reputed hospitals. Such joys are not permanent, these fake degrees might give momentary benefits but in the long run one has to pay a price. With so much competition and unemployment in India, getting a job is a big deal. A person seeking a job with a fake degree not only defrauds the company he is working for, but he also de-frauds the general public, with a legit degree, by blocking their placement opportunities by forging papers.
In India, there are many “degree mills” found to provide illegitimate academic degrees, diplomas or PhDs. India has not adopted plenary authority or strict laws to regulate schools and the quality of an institution’s degree and prohibit them from issuing fake degrees. There was one big degree scam that shook many students, Manav Bharti University (MBU) in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh had sold as many as 36,000 degrees since it was founded in 2009, for prices ranging from 100,000 to 300,000 rupees (USD 1,362-4,085), an Indian government agency investigated this fraud. Of the 41,000 degrees issued by the university at that time, only 5,000 were found to be genuine. Manav Bharti University’s owners were arrested. The owner was a multi-millionaire before his arrest; he had sent his family to Australia. After some time, he got bail. The police now said they wanted the enforcement directorate to investigate. In the end, the buyers are the losers.
The internet has allowed an excessive proliferation of bogus universities, fake websites to back-up bogus certificates and fake degrees. These fake websites are to dupe innocent potential students into thinking they’re applying for a real university or to make people think they are studying on a distance learning course online for a degree or diploma. Those not “innocent” people spent money in buying fraudulent qualifications to deceive employers and when the employers checked their status on the fake website, the message was returned as ‘this person is a bonafide graduate.’
Therefore, it is pretty easy to get a fake degree. Fake degrees are a big and billion-dollar market. You buy a degree, even an MPhil or a PhD from deemed universities like Vinayaka Missions or Singhania. There are many universities in Madhya Pradesh and Bihar too. They present themselves as endorsed by the UGC. You pay the agent and he gets you a degree which is recorded in their books. So, if an embassy or a university or an employer verifies it, the result is positive. You can even get it verified from the MEA or MHRD via an agent. These fake universities are not authorized to conduct distance MSc or MBA or MPhil. The buyer does not know about it so they buy.
How many foreigners know about this rule? Hardly anybody. They sell degrees everywhere and recently Vinayaka sold MSc degrees to high-ranking officials of the Haryana govt. It took five years to register FIR against them and some of them have retired by now. The UGC has put notices on its website regarding it but how many of us know? Close to zero. There are two types of educational institutions, first government and second private. Government organizations work for the public and private organizations work for the intensification of profits. Most of these fake degree institutions are private or sanctioned for government grants.
If you see Vinayaka, Singhania, Periyar or MBU degrees, just move on. They all have UGC stamps all over them still fake. While people rarely check, faking a degree can backfire spectacularly with long-ranging consequences. Why go for a fake and risk your future when you can get a genuine degree from getting educated yourself? These days if procuring a fake degree is possible then getting caught is also hugely possible. What they all boil down to is lying. It’s vetted, now even more so. When you lie about something, you destroy your credibility. What you reveal is your lack of integrity.
Unfortunately, we lack stringent laws, in the case of a fake certificate the MNC in India just terminates the candidate because they don’t want to get into long judicial procedures and waste their time and money. There is no strict law for document fabrication. Nor is it a punishable offence, nor can a company spend on lawyer fees to punish a candidate for the fake experience of a fake degree. Legal Punishment is hardly some fine after conviction in court or some day’s jail.
Those fake degree racketeers hardly get caught because they keep their pally with local authorities and cops. Some of them get caught and get released on bail. The government allotted huge funds for education but there is hardly any effort in mentoring the scams and schemes.
An Indian Air Force helicopter with Chief of Defence Staff Gen Bipin Rawat on board met with an accident on Wednesday near Coonoor in Tamil Nadu, the IAF said, as four persons were killed in the mishap that happened reportedly due to low visibility due to foggy conditions.
However, there was no immediate information on the condition of Gen Rawat, even as the IAF said a Court of Inquiry has been ordered into the accident, involving a Mi-17VH chopper that took from the Sulur IAF Station in nearby Coimbatore.
Official sources in Delhi said all the injured people on board the helicopter have been evacuated from the spot of the accident.
The Chief of Defence Staff was on his way to the Defence Staff College in Wellington.
BREAKING
Indian Air Force Mi-17V5 helicopter, with CDS General #BipinRawat on-board, meets with an accident near Coonoor, Tamil Nadu pic.twitter.com/M1rAxkFKuF
Meanwhile, official sources in Coimbatore said four bodies have been retrieved and three persons rescued from under the debris of the helicopter which crashed in the Katteri-Nanchappanchathram area near Coonoor in the hilly Nilgiris district. There was no concrete information immediately on the number of persons travelling in the ill-fated chopper though official sources had earlier said 3-4 senior officials were among its occupants.
The helicopter, carrying a few senior officials, was on its way from Sulur in Coimbatore to DSC in Wellington where Rawat, along with Chief of Army Staff MM Naravane, was slated to participate in an event later.
The chopper crashed in a forest area, reportedly due to poor visibility following heavy fog, official sources said.
TV visuals showed the chopper in flames, apparently under the impact of the crash. Rescue personnel, along with Army personnel, were seen involved in clearing the area.
In the recent past, Mumbai police have cracked down on many fake degree cases and busted the gangs, whereas online fake degree trading is a real challenge to cyber crime police. These cases go unreported because the issuer of fake degrees is online and the receiver receives it secretly.
Vipin Kang, a pharmacist said, “More than half of the medical store owners and workers in India have a fake Bachelors of Pharmacy degree. It is common practice in India to “rent” your B.Pharm certificate to medical store owners if you are pursuing M.Pharm. You can make enough money to pay your living expenses while pursuing M.Pharm that way. Getting a fake degree, one which you can put on a public display without fear of getting caught, in India is as easy as paying USD 200 if you know the right source.”
There are many websites including “Quikr”, that trade certificates in bulk. If one has the budget to spend the demanded amount of money, they can get the qualification they wish to be. When we asked cyber crime police, the officer said on the condition of anonymity “We can act when we receive a complaint against such websites, but if it is only a fake degree case then the crime branch officers are doing their best. If the cases are false under the preview of IT act then we can surely act on it.”
A few days back Mumbai police arrested two persons Wajuddin Ali Khan (39) and Vicky Kumar Sharma (22), who had been making the bogus certificates for the last year. Cops said the accused sold each mark sheet for Rs 3,000. The officials said the accused scanned the original mark sheets and certificates and changed the names and years as per their client’s requirement, after which they handed over the colour printouts in return for Rs 3,000.
Nishant Verma a political analyst said, “Issuance of fake degrees is a big concern, only quality education can help society grow. Corruption is the core cause for such malpractices to flourish, which is universal and not only limited to India. The rampant issuance of fake degrees is due to a lack of accountability in the overall Education system. Most Universities involved in such scams have either received the ‘deemed’ status or are affiliated to a ‘deemed’ one. The Regulatory authority of education, such as UGC is unable to maintain the checks & balances, leading to such malpractices under the nose of Politicians, some of whom use their clout and permit Fake Degree Business for varied gains, especially while being in the ruling party.”
Nishant continued stating “In USA, there are instances in the past of Fatal Air Crashes, while Pilots obtained Licenses thru corrupt means – NTSB reports. Above all, it’s the people, who go for an easy way, exploiting the corrupt means, from obtaining a Fake Degree to a Fake Driving License, in order to bypass the set process. Although a degree doesn’t necessarily point to the expertise of the holder in a particular field, profession, occupation, ability, however, obtaining or issuance of a Fake Degree only reflects the Corrupt mindset of the public at large.”
Vaishali Mulay, a Businesswoman said, “Normally, degrees are verified with the issuing university when people are hired, or at least they’re supposed to be. “Fake degrees” are not only useless, but they are dangerous to one who might claim such a qualification. Companies certainly do check on people’s claimed degrees. Not immediately, of course. But a person who lies about having a degree will not be able to perform his job as well as one who actually had that education. No company will tolerate an employee who has been found dishonest about his background. Unfortunately, the scrutiny is not very strict, so the defaulters get caught but not immediately.”
Sujit Patker, a Mumbai businessman told Afternoon Voice said, “Fake degrees and certificates have been an alarming issue for a few years. There are so many institutes both national and international to sell these at a cost. Now, education as such has become a business where there is a buyer and a seller both hand in gloves. The whole business of education, especially when it comes to post-graduation degrees like PhD is a sham and bogus where I understand that candidates as buyers just give money and purchase certificates as read in newspapers. The governance is missing and there needs to be strict vigilance on such businesses. Ultimately, the respectable profession has lost its integrity. Noble professions like doctors, engineers, PhD holders are held high but these days there are credibility concerns. Education industry right from the inception of playschool level to super specialization is looked down upon as a business where corruption is infused as a donation and looked down as ROI (return over investment).”
Sangeeta Amladi, a former banker said, “Fake degrees are a real threat but companies are taking proper care of it. Worse, the lying employee will be discharged “for cause”. And that information will be given to any future prospective employer who calls to check on that job applicant. No details will be given, but being discharged for cause is the kiss of death for anyone’s candidacy for any other job. No other company will be willing to take a risk on such a person. When a company finds even a single item on a resume has been falsified, they will assume that nothing on the paper can be believed. And more importantly, that the individual cannot be trusted, with a job or even to be on company premises. There will be no opportunity to “explain” or “justify” or “correct” the misstatements.
Harin Naik, an IT professional said, “Back in the day, a colleague who was a VP at PWC was interviewing a candidate whose resume indicated an MBA from Harvard. The interviewer had also gone to Harvard business school and so to set the candidate at ease at the start of the interview, he engaged the candidate in informal chit-chat about life at Harvard. Except that the candidate didn’t seem to know the campus, which was odd. The interviewer excused himself, went to another room and called the Harvard registrar who had no record of the candidate attending Harvard. The interviewer returned to the room and let the candidate know that the interview was over and he was no longer under consideration for the job. But the question is that how many interviewers might be really catching the frauds? And how many fraudsters are really getting punished?”
Gaurav Singh, cyber security personal said, “Many small business groups especially it to the beauty industry, make or wellness, even for catering and hospitality display big certificates of achievements. Not only that but various certificates related qualifications. Customers generally don’t check the authenticity but they get influenced. You will find photographs of great politicians and actors morphed with them. There is no dearth of such frauds. What is needed is vigilance body and learned people.”
Dr Anshuman Manaswi, Senior Plastic Surgeon said, “The standard Allopathy or Modern Medicine degrees are MBBS, MS, MD, DNB and diplomas in various specialists. MBBS is the basic degree without which one cannot practice Allopathy. Let us be very clear that as per the MCI or NMC and the state medical commissions, no one else can practise allopathic medicine. The problem is that there is no agency allotted to check the fraudsters. One can see it everywhere. One can find advertisements of such fake courses everyone, but only the authorities can’t see. Ayush doctors, compounders, technicians, pathology technicians, medical shop owners, everyone is prescribing medicines. Is health on agenda only for namesake, is the question we shall have to ask ourselves? The solution lies in having strict punishment for anyone who is transgressing their field or limitation. A health care worker in Village should be checked if he/she is prescribing more than what is allowed. This along with a proper referral system and the development of health infrastructure is the solution. Even in speciality and super specialities, many doctors are practising things that are not in their domain. It’s a larger problem. How come liposuction a surgical procedure is done by Dermatologists, Gynaecologists, cosmetologists, oculoplastic surgeons? It is just the tip of the iceberg. Unless we have strict norms and divisions or subdivisions as each case may be ( with an exception for an emergency) we are doomed as far as the quality of healthcare is concerned. Let us not make life cheap in India.”
Khushi Mishra, a software developer said, “Many of them buy fake degrees nowadays rich kids mostly, who wants a reputed job which suits their family backgrounds and also many who need promotions or hike in the salary. But by using such fake degrees they have to face many problems because it’s a fake certificate.”
Saharsh Luniya, Businessman said “It happens widely in our country and it also takes a lot of money. What I have observed is that most then take a degree in one sector and then work in some other sector. This way they stay on the safer side. There are many who just require the degree for marriage purposes and then they just go on handling their business. One may take a degree in a core branch-like mechanical and then go on working in some branch-like production, etc. While it is easy to provide fake degrees to get a job, it is extremely unethical and wrong to do so. It has far reached consequences for your career.”
Arya Dhumane, Engineering Student said, “Personally, I know of a case where the guy joined one of my earlier employers in a leadership position and after a period of time his exit was announced out of the blue. Later, we learned that he had provided a fake Bachelor of Engineering – Computer Science certificate when he actually had only a Diploma. During background verification, this anomaly was found and as part of corrective action, the company decided to fire him. Think of it – a senior-level executive was fired for wrongly claiming to have a degree which he never had. The shock, the shame and the prospect of not getting a job easily (word goes around fast in the industry) is too much the risk for such kinds of unethical practices. Please don’t be under the impression once you get the job, you’ll be safe. The above example is a case in question. Also, anyone can complain against your degree (if they have prior information about the fake certificate) due to which the company management may conduct a thorough background verification that might bring out the truth.”
BJP leader Kirit Somaiya alleges Rs 100 crore scam by Shiv Sena leader Yashwant Jadhav, demands probe by Enforcement Directorate (ED), Income Tax department (IT Dept) and Election Commission of India (ECI).
BJP leader Kirit Somaiya said, “Mumbai Corporation, Shiv Sena leader Yashwant Jadhav’s 100 crore scam probe started. The preliminary report is ready. I requested action from ED, Income Tax, and Election Commission.”
Somaiya further stated that “Complaints have been registered to the Election Department, Tax Department and the ED. MLA Yamini Jadhav, Yashwant Jadhav, their sons Yatin Jadhav, Nikhil Jadhav and their dozens of bogus companies, Pradhan dealers, Skylink commercials, super soft suppliers, etc. BMC’s contractor’s money and Yashwantrao’s scam will be exposed soon.”
Yashwant Jadhav, who is the standing committee chairman in Shiv Sena-controlled Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC), has refuted all the allegations stating he is unaware of all that Somaiya is talking about.
Yashwant Jadhav told Afternoon Voice “From the past six months Kirit Somaiya has been making all sorts of allegations but I don’t know what has triggered him. So far there is no official inquiry on me, and no authorities questioned me on these so-called allegations, If authorities question me I am ready to answer them but not everyone. I am not answerable to the opposition. They are doing their job, let them.”
Another Shiv Sena leader said it was a political conspiracy to defame Jadhav ahead of BMC elections. Kirit Somaiya has accused many Shiv Sena leaders of some of the other scams and corruption but he himself could not reach any conclusion. His allegation comes as soap bubbles and bursts.
In the purported audio clip, Jadhav is heard asking Suraj Pratap Singh Deora — a representative of Yash Corporation — to withdraw from the contract of development works worth Rs 2.17 crore in corporator ward 206 in E ward (Byculla). The firm had bagged the contract through e-tendering. As Deora expressed his inability to withdraw from the works, Jadhav is allegedly heard asking him if he wanted to continue working with BMC or not. While Jadhav is a corporator from ward 206, his wife Yamini Jadhav is the Byculla MLA. Meanwhile, BJP leader Vinod Mishra said, “Jadhav’s direction is clear cut interference in administrative work.”
Jadhav, however, denied all allegations. “The allegations of threatening the contractor are false. Since the contractor’s work was not satisfactory, I was asking the BMC administration not to give the contract to this company. The same contractor had done works in Mulund in BJP corporators wards.
A day after the Income Tax (I-T) Department reportedly found discrepancies in the election affidavit filed by Shiv Sena legislator Yamini Jadhav for the 2019 Assembly polls, her husband and Sena leader Yashwant Jadhav said the allegations were politically motivated ahead of the BMC election. He added they have not received any communication from any central agency so far. The Shiv Sena has maintained silence on the issue.
The I-T department may submit its findings to the Election Commission and seek her disqualification, which can become a major embarrassment for the ruling Shiv Sena. The I-T Department has found that a Kolkata-based shell company was used to launder Rs 15 crores by Jadhav’s. The findings showed that as per the affidavit filed by the candidate, she availed an unsecured loan including one from Pradhan Dealers Pvt Ltd of Rs 1 crore. The department said Pradhan Dealers was found to be a shell company run and controlled from Kolkata by entry operators.
Sudha Bharadwaj is one Classic example of how raising a voice against an oppressive state can lead to prolonged jail terms even though politicians, the main instigators of violence & death go scot-free. In jail since 2018, Sudha Bharadwaj was granted default bail this month by the Bombay High Court, which said that a court that extended the investigation against her and prolonged her detention did not have the jurisdiction to do so.
The Koregaon-Bhima case relates to alleged inflammatory speeches delivered at an Elgar Parishad conclave held in Pune on December 31, 2017, which the police claimed triggered violence the next day near the Koregaon-Bhima war memorial located on Pune’s outskirts.
The Pune police had claimed the conclave was backed by Maoists. The probe in the case was later transferred to the NIA. Sudha Bharadwaj is the first among 16 activists and academicians arrested in the case to have been granted default bail. Poet-activist Varavara Rao is currently out on medical bail. Jesuit priest Stan Swamy died in a private hospital in the city on July 5 this year, while waiting for medical bail. The others are all in custody as under trial.
Sudha Bharadwaj is a trade unionist, activist and lawyer who has lived and worked in Chhattisgarh for over three decades. She is an active member of the Chhattisgarh Mukti Morcha (Mazdoor Karyakarta Committee). Sudha was born in Boston and lived in the United States and the United Kingdom as a child. Sudha’s mother, Krishna Bharadwaj, was a well-known academic and economist, who had founded the Center for Economic Studies and Planning at Jawaharlal Nehru University. At age 11, Sudha moved with her mother to Delhi. Since then, she has seen oppression, inequality and social stature.
A humble looking lady, in a cotton sari with a calm smile on her face, her motive is to fight for those who have lost their voices. She is alleged for spreading leftist ideology to influence the minds of people and achieve political victory through ballots. She and other activists were accused of plotting the murder of PM Modi and planning to create a Kashmir like situation in other parts of India, but this was just IT cell propaganda and nothing could be established during investigations.
Indian democracy has always been a work in progress. There is no doubt that, unlike most postcolonial democracies, the idea of representative democracy, elections, free speech, free association and rule of law took deeper root in India. But while there may be a difference in degree, there has never been a golden period where individual rights were sacrosanct and protected as rigorously as the original drafters of the Constitution had in mind.
This was signified in Jawaharlal Nehru’s push to bring in the first amendment, which restricted the scope for fundamental rights, Indira Gandhi’s Emergency, Rajiv Gandhi’s attempts at bringing in the anti-defamation bill, the curtailment of individual liberty under anti-terror laws, the fact that perpetrators of even mass crimes have often got away, and the crackdown on free expression for the fear of offending sensitivities. So no regime can claim it has been truly democratic.
The action against a series of intellectuals and activists and journalists — Sudha Bharadwaj, Anand Teltumbde, Stan Swamy, Apoorvanand, Harsh Mander are among the better-known examples — indicates that the space for free expression and dissent is jeopardized. It gives rise to apprehensions that the political dispensation does not view criticism as an essential ingredient of democracy. It empowers the police to be vindictive rather than fair. It erodes the rule of law. And it creates fear. This is not to suggest that critics must not be held accountable for any illegal or unlawful activity; nor is it to endorse the viewpoints of many of these activists. But it does mean that the regime must revise its approach and deepen its commitment to rights.