Rajkot: Rajkot police on Saturday arrested a school teacher, Sagar Vadher, for assaulting a Class 7 girl student at the D.K. School. The incident occurred on Friday.
Inspector R.G. Barot told the media that Vadher has been under under the IPC sections related to assault or criminal force on women, criminal intimidation and various sections of Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POSCO) Act.
School principal Jagruti Patadia told the media that it was an unfortunate incident, and the moment the student’s parents complained over phone, she checked the CCTV footage of the classroom, and on finding that Vadher had assaulted the girl, she immediately informed the police.
Vadher had joined the school just one-and-a-half months ago. The school’s timing is 12 noon to 6 p.m., and mostly the staff stayed back after school hours. But on Friday, Vadher had left the school early.
“The student described her ordeal to her parents on returning home. Had she told us, we would have acted faster,” Patadia said.
The victim’s mother alleged that after returning from school, her daughter looked tense. On inquiry, she said that her teacher had touched her inappropriately.
Anantnag, Jan 26: A 16-year-old girl from South Kashmir’s Anantnag district has brought laurels to the entire J&K by bagging a very prestigious Pradhan Mantri Rashtriya Bal Puraskar (PMRBP), 2023 award.
Hanaya Nisar, a resident of Kokernag area of Anantnag, has been given this award as she had represented India and won the Gold Medal in the 3rd World SQAY Martial Arts Championship held in Chingju, South Korea in October 2018.
Hanaya, who is an 11th class student while talking to news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) said that she feels very much honoured to receive this prestigious award and everyone around her including Mir Salma Rashid, whole Sqay federation of India, family and relatives are very much happy.
Hanaya has so far won dozens of gold medals in Martial arts at International, National and state level so far.
She has recently won gold medal in 23rd Sqay National Championship held in Jammu besides that she was given Champion of Champions title by Sqay federation of India.
“I guess the sports infrastructure needs more improvement as the biggest challenge that they have also faced is of Sponsorship that almost every sports person faces and I guess that is something which can create a great impact on your journey,” she said when asked about sports infrastructure in J&K UT.
She said that Martial Arts needs to be prioritised across all the states of India not just J&K.
On asking about her future plans, she said she wants to continue playing Sqay Martial Arts and wants to pursue law as well.
My message to the youth of J&K will be that we should be focused towards our dreams, we should never give up on our dreams no matter what.
It is worth to mention here that the Pradhan Mantri Rashtriya Bal Puraskar (‘Prime Minister’s National Award for Children’), formerly called the National Child Award for Exceptional Achievement, is India’s highest civilian honour for children, awarded annually by the Ministry of Women and Child Development.
Bal Puraskar is given to children aged five to 18 for their achievements in six categories: Art & Culture, Bravery, Innovation, Scholastic, Social Service, and Sports. Each PMRBP awardee receives a medal, a cash prize of Rs1 lakh, and a certificate.
This year, eleven children from across India were awarded for their outstanding achievements in the fields of art and culture (4), bravery (1), innovation (2), social service (1), and sports (3)—(KNO)
SRINAGAR: Body of teenage girl who had jumped into the river Jhelum in Khanpora area of north Kashmir’s Baramulla district on December 31, was retrieved after 26 days on Thursday.
Quoting an official the news agency KNO reported that the girl had jumped into river Jehlum near Khanpora bridge in Baramulla.
He said that following the incident, a massive search operation was launched, however, there was no trace of her.
The official said after 26 days her body was retrieved today near Veerwan area of the district.
He said after medico-legal formalities the body was handed over to legal heirs for last rites.
Agra: A four-year-old girl was killed and a few others were injured as six houses collapsed in Agra in Uttar Pradesh Thursday morning due to excavation work in a nearby dharamshala, police said.
According to Deputy Commissioner of Police (City) Vikas Kumar, the incident took place around 7 am.
Excavation work was going on in a dharamshala in Tila Maithan locality near Agra City Railway Station. Under its impact, six houses and one temple collapsed, the police officer said.
“Three persons were trapped under the debris. They were identified as Vivek Kumar and his two daughters — Videhi (5) and Rusali (4),” the police officer said.
They were taken to a hospital where Rusali died.
Manoj Verma, another resident whose house collapsed in the incident, told PTI, “With the grace of god the incident happened in the morning when very few people were in their houses. Had it happened at night, many people would have been trapped.”
The police officer said they are investigating the matter.
Hyderabad: Paloncha sub-divisional police issued a missing notice for a tenth-class student, Sri Vidya (15) who has been away from Monday.
Paloncha District Superintendent of Police (DSP) in his statement said the missing student who was enrolled at Telangana Social Welfare Residential Educational Institutions Society (TSWREIS) left her hostel and from then has been missing.
Upon realising that his daughter was missing, Sammaiah complained at Paloncha town police.
Three teams have been formed for tracing the girl.
If anyone finds the girl, the information has to be shared with the DSP on his mobile number: 9490800100, CI Nagaraju’s number: 9440795313, or SI’s number: 9440795315, the statement said.
Ludo Game Affair: Pakistani Girl Falls in Love With Uttar Pradesh Boy While Playing Board Game Online, Crosses Border To Meet Him; Both Arrested
In a bizarre incident, a Pakistani girl fell in love with a boy from Uttar Pradesh while playing online Ludo game.
According to reports, the girl violated border rules and came to India via Nepal in order to meet her boyfriend. Later, both were arrested from Bengaluru.
As per a report in Aaj Tak, after meeting each other, the duo got married and started living together in Bengaluru. However, they ran out of luck when the police arrested the girl for illegally entering India and staying in the country by procuring fake documents. The police also arrested the boy in connection with the forgery case.
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POLICE STATEMENT
According to the police, 26-year-old mulayam singh yadav is originally from Uttar Pradesh. He works as a security guard in HSR Layout, a private company in Bangalore. Mulayam was fond of playing Ludo online, it was through this game that he came in contact with a 19-year-old girl, Iqra Jeevani, living in Hyderabad, Pakistan. Both started living in a labor quarter in the Bellandur police station limits of Bangalore. However, somehow the police got information about the whole matter. The police arrested both of them.
Case Against Landlord
Both the lovers were living in a labor quarter in the Bellandur police station area. The DCP said that as soon as information was received about the two, the police took action and handed over the girl to the FRRO (Foreigner Regional Registration Office). At the same time, after registering a case against the boy, he has been arrested.
The police have also registered a case against the owner of the house where the couple was staying. An FIR has been registered under Section 7 against the owner of the house, Govinda Reddy. It is alleged that he did not inform the police about the foreign girl living illegally in his house. At the same time, Mulayam Singh has been booked under sections 420 (cheating), 495 (concealment of marriage), 468 (forgery) and 471 (forgery document) of IPC.
(Agencies)
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A Pakistani girl who had fallen in love with UP youth while LUDO game online and crossed the border to meet him finally end up in police custody after getting arrested in Bengaluru on Friday.
As per media reports, the youth Mulayam Singh Yadav who is aged 25 years used to frequently play online LUDO game. While playing the game, he met the girl Iqra Jeevani who is aged 19 years. Both of them not only fell in love but also decided to spend life together.
In order to meet her lover, the Pakistani girl illegally traveled to India via Nepal.
Attempt to procure fake documents
After entering India, the couple moved to Bengaluru and stayed in a rented house near the Ayyappa temple in Junnasandra.
Yadav, even got an Aadhaar card made for Iqra after changing her name to Rava Yadav and applied for an Indian passport.
The case came to light when the Central intelligence agencies came across Iqra who was trying to contact her family members back in Pakistan and alerted the state intelligence.
Their love story came to an end when police arrested the girl for illegally entering India and procuring fake documents. Police also arrested the youth under a forgery case.
Later, Iqra was handed over to the FRRO officials, who later remanded her to a state home for women till further investigations are carried out.
Earlier Pakistani woman attempted to cross border for Hyderabadi lover
It is not the first time earlier too similar incident took place.
Last year, the Sashastra Seema Bal apprehended a Pakistani woman for attempting to enter India illegally. Two more persons were taken into custody for assisting her. They were identified as Kalija Noor from Faisalabad in Pakistan, Mahamood from Hyderabad, and Jeevan from Nepal.
The three were caught near the Indo-Nepal border near Sursand in Bihar and later handed over to local police.
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Bengaluru: A 19-year-old Pakistani girl, who allegedly forged her identity to stay illegally in India, has been arrested in Bengaluru, police said on Sunday.
The police arrested Iqra Jeevani and handed over to the FRRO officials. She was later sent to a state home for women.
Bellandur police also arrested Mulayam Singh Yadav, a 25-year-old security guard from Uttar Pradesh, whom the Pakistani girl married after meeting him through a dating app a few months ago.
According to police, she had entered India through the porous India-Nepal border.
The investigations revealed that Yadav befriended Iqra on a dating app and they decided to get married.
The security guard had called her to Nepal a few months ago where they got married. The couple crossed into India to reach Birgunj in Bihar and from there, reached Patna.
Yadav and Iqra later came to Bengaluru and stayed in a rented house in Junnasandra where Yadav started working as security guard since September 2022.
He even secured an Aadhaar card for Iqra after changing her name to Rava Yadav and applied for an Indian passport.
Iqra came under the scanner of central intelligence agencies when she was trying to contact her family in Pakistan. The central agencies alerted the Karnataka intelligence. Acting on the information, police raided the house and arrested the couple.
Sources said further investigations were on to check whether the Pakistani was part of any espionage ring
The Starling Girl, the feature debut from writer-director Laurel Parmet, sets forth two difficult, easily muddled tasks. First, striking the correct tonal balance for a sexual relationship separated by age and authority – in this case, an intoxicating, transgressive romance between 17-year-old Jem Starling (Eliza Scanlen) and her brusquely handsome, 28-year-old youth pastor Owen (Lewis Pullman, son of actor Bill). And the second, depicting an insular religious community – a group of fundamentalist Christians in present-day Kentucky – with enough specificity and emotional acuity to bridge the gap with viewers who will find such a place opaque, unrelatable or possibly even unbelievable.
Parmet succeeds more on the former than the latter. The Starling Girl, anchored by a bristling performance from the always solid Scanlen, is at its best when it hews to the combustible suspense of a teenage girl glimpsing her own instincts – for honesty, for autonomy, and most threateningly for pleasure. It’s ultimately less a portrait of a toxic relationship – that’s not the tone of Owen and Jem’s connection here – than a familiar battle of faith and feelings, intuition versus indoctrination, the fine line between sin and sublime.
Glance by glance, Jem is invariably drawn to Owen against the backdrop of shame-ridden conservatism. The two first reconnect on a stairwell outside church – Jem in snotty tears after a fellow congregant chastises her visible bra outline; Owen, recently returned from a missionary stint in Puerto Rico, the subject of gossip over why he and his wife (Jessamine Burgum) don’t have children yet. This is Duggar-type Christian fundamentalism – long skirts and covered shoulders, no social associations outside church and no secular culture.
The honeyed Southern summer setting, lushly captured by cinematographer Brian Lannin, feels expansive in a way Jem’s social and emotional futures do not. By day, she escapes into dance practice and solo bike rides at dusk, the air thick with humidity and crickets (characters are dripping in sweat on multiple occasions, often coinciding with a melting of control). By night, she experiments with masturbation and curses her sinful hand. One afternoon, her strictly devout mother (Wrenn Schmidt) and father (Jimmi Simpson), a former secular musician and addict whose recovery is thornily bound up in faith, inform her that it’s time for her to court Owen’s painfully sheltered brother Ben (Euphoria’s Austin Abrams), and that’s that.
Jem balks and bargains – it is never boring to watch Scanlen, most notably of Sharp Objects and Little Women fame, play a character whose inner fire scrabbles with her learned politeness, and whose lust is basically indistinguishable from a crucial curiosity about the world. This is where the casting gets tricky. Scanlen, who is 24, has such a deft handle on reckless, almost devious innocence that she can still pull off a high-schooler, but barely. In another movie, she and Pullman, who is 29, could play uncomplicated lovers. Last year’s Sundance standout Palm Trees and Power Lines managed to balance both the magnetism and grossness of a relationship between a 17-year-old girl and 34-year-old man largely through the casting of actual teenager Lily McInerny, who looked believably her age – as in, more child than woman, shockingly young.
The Starling Girl manages to skirt the issue of credulity by framing the central relationship as less toxic than desperate. Pullman capably plays Owen as somewhat of a Peter Pan with a visibly fractured psyche. Her instincts are nascent and powerful; his have been so stunted by shame as to resemble that of a teenager. The 116-minute film plays, however intentionally, like a genuine if deeply flawed connection, one whose inappropriateness is outdone by the merciless expectations inflicted by their community. When he takes her virginity in the backseat of a car, in an expertly staged scene that focuses on her thrill and disappointment, it feels both achingly teenage and ominous. He cannot conceive of her pleasure; she will of course pay for it.
Parmet maintains a firm grip on this slippery relationship throughout its doomed course, less so on their world – if the rules are so strict and the gossip so thick here, how could these two plausibly get away with time together? A side plot involving her father’s descent into alcoholism provides motivation for Jem to distrust her rigid world even more, but culminates in unnecessarily high stakes. The final act’s redemption feels almost gratuitous in its depiction of her family and community’s emotional cruelty. The conclusion is, thankfully, appropriately understated; Scanlen can portray miles of emotional growth with a few short minutes. Films of this tricky variety often hinge on the central performance, and in her hands, it mostly works.
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( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )