Tag: safe

  • ‘We felt scared, but college campus was safe’: BTech students on return from Manipur

    ‘We felt scared, but college campus was safe’: BTech students on return from Manipur

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    New Delhi: Haryana native Sewak Ram, pursuing BTech at a leading engineering college in Imphal, heaved a sigh of relief after landing in Delhi from violence-hit Manipur on Tuesday.

    “We felt scared, but the campus of our college made us feel safe. We had food and water. But, being confined inside the campus for about five days reminded us about the Covid-induced lockdown,” Ram said.

    He hugged his college mate at the airport here before they parted on the way to their homes.

    MS Education Academy

    Ram and a few other students from Haryana, all pursuing BTech degree at Indian Institute of Information Technology (IIIT), Manipur, reached the national capital on Tuesday evening after being evacuated from the northeastern state which has been rocked by ethnic violence since May 3.

    Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh had on Monday said that 60 people were killed, 231 injured and 1,700 houses including religious places burnt in the violence that sparked concerns among family members of students from various states studying in that state.

    Some of the evacuees, all in their early 20s, PTI spoke to at the Delhi airport said the Harayana government “made arrangements for their safe return” after students and parents reached out to it, in the wake of the violence.

    “Situation is difficult in villages and inner areas, but Imphal city is safer. Police provided us everything,” Ram told PTI.

    He said many students of IIIT-Manipur hailing from other states have also been evacuated by their respective state governments.

    More than 140 students from Bihar were on Tuesday brought back from Manipur. Scenes of rejoicing were witnessed at Patna airport as they returned safely to their home state.

    According to an official, a special flight commissioned by the Nitish Kumar government carried 142 students from Bihar, besides another 21 from the neighbouring state of Jharkhand.

    In Delhi, while some evacuees made their way to their homes in Haryana by themselves, harried parents of some had come to the airport to take them home, after waiting anxiously for the flight from Imphal to land.

    Panipat native Lakshya, a first-year student of BTech, went home accompanied by his parents.

    “He has not eaten anything since morning. But I am just happy that my child is back,” Lakshya’s mother said, as they wheeled their way out of the airport.

    Lakshya said in the last several days situation was “not good” and “I am glad we are out of that situation”.

    Arvind Pathak of Gurugram was also among the evacuees who reached Delhi along with his fellow students of the engineering college.

    “Earlier, situation in Manipur was quite bad, now it is a bit better. We were all together in the campus, so we didn’t feel much fear. Our teachers also comforted us,” he said.

    The situation across violence-hit Manipur is improving, with no fresh reports of any untoward incident, while curfew has been relaxed in all the 11 districts where it was clamped, officials said on Tuesday.

    Meanwhile, Meghalaya Chief Minister Conrad K Sangma on Tuesday said more than 300 students from the state, who were stranded in violence-hit Manipur, were brought back in the last few days.

    Sangma also said his government had on Monday arranged for a special flight on the Imphal-Shillong route to evacuate students stuck in the trouble-torn state.

    Violent clashes broke out in Manipur after a ‘Tribal Solidarity March’ was organised in the 10 hill districts on May 3 to protest against the Meitei community’s demand for Scheduled Tribe (ST) status.

    The clashes took place between the tribals living in the Manipur hills and the majority Meitei community residing in the Imphal Valley. Over 23,000 people have been rescued and sheltered in military garrisons and relief camps.

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    #felt #scared #college #campus #safe #BTech #students #return #Manipur

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Aviation Technician, Injured in Kishtwar Helicopter Crash, Succumbs; 2 Pilots ‘Safe’

    Aviation Technician, Injured in Kishtwar Helicopter Crash, Succumbs; 2 Pilots ‘Safe’

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    Kishtwar, May 4: An Aviation technician, among the three members on board a helicopter witnessing a crash in Kishtwar Thursday afternoon, has succumbed to his injuries, official sources said.

    They told GNS that the Aviation Technician Pabballa Anil was evacuated from the site of crash alongside the two pilots to Command Hospital Udhampur. “The injured technician succumbed shortly after”, they said adding the two pilots are safe and are responding well to the treatment.

    Earlier in a statement, a defence spokesperson said that three army personnel, including two pilots and a technician, sustained injuries after a helicopter they were on board apparently made a rough landing along the banks of Marua river in Kishtwar region this morning.

    “At about 1115 hours on 04 May 2023, an Army Aviation ALH Dhruv helicopter on an operational mission made a precautionary landing on the banks of Marua river in the Kishtwar region of Jammu and Kashmir. As per inputs, the pilots had reported a technical fault to the Air Traffic Controller (ATC) and proceeded for a precautionary landing. Due to the undulating ground, undergrowth and unprepared landing area, the helicopter apparently made a hard landing”, reads a defence official statement adding an immediate rescue operation was launched and Army rescue teams reached the site.

    “Two pilots and a technician were on board. All three injured personnel have been evacuated to Command Hospital, Udhampur.”

    “A Court of Inquiry has been ordered”, reads the statement adding further details are being ascertained. (GNS)

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    #Aviation #Technician #Injured #Kishtwar #Helicopter #Crash #Succumbs #Pilots #Safe

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • PEESAFE Pee Safe Toilet Seat Sanitizer Spray – 75 ml (Pack of 3, Lavender)

    PEESAFE Pee Safe Toilet Seat Sanitizer Spray – 75 ml (Pack of 3, Lavender)

    511Zz10eeWL51MEe2jQkRL41SqCro+a5L41N0H5mUyML
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
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    Scent: lavender size: pack 3 tired of squatting on western toilet seats because you can’t risk touching the toilet seat. Or public toilet guarantees you infection whenever used. Peesafe toilet seat sanitizer spray is one stop solution to disinfect the toilet seat. With the quirk of lively lavender, the spray deodorizes the washroom to provide with smoothing sanitisation experience. When there is no water around or it is not possible for you to visit the washroom, sanitizer can act as a saviour. It will ensure your hygiene safety.
    Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
    Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 16.5 x 17.5 x 13.5 cm; 210 Grams
    Date First Available ‏ : ‎ 13 May 2018
    Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Eclat Pharma & Aerosols Private Limited
    ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07D2G9BK8
    Item model number ‏ : ‎ RC043
    Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ India
    Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Eclat Pharma & Aerosols Private Limited, Eclat Pharma & Aerosols Pvt Ltd 421, 4th Floor, Blue Rose Industrial Estate, Beside Metro Wholesale Mall, W. E. Highway, Borivali (East), Mumbai – 400 066 PH no – +91 22 2870 2212 Email id – info@eclatpharma.in
    Packer ‏ : ‎ Redcliffe Hygiene Pvt Ltd Plot no. 456-457 Ground floor, Udyog Vihar Phase-iii Gurugram-122016, Haryana India Care@peesafe.com +91-9870279353
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 210 g
    Item Dimensions LxWxH ‏ : ‎ 16.5 x 17.5 x 13.5 Centimeters
    Net Quantity ‏ : ‎ 225.0 millilitre
    Included Components ‏ : ‎ Spray bottle

    Fits any bag and is very comfortable to use
    The spray comes handy and is your perfect travel companion
    It reduces the risk you washroom-borne infections like uti
    It can also be used in homes to maintain hygiene of your entire family and provide a quick sanitized toilet.

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    #PEESAFE #Pee #Safe #Toilet #Seat #Sanitizer #Spray #Pack #Lavender

  • Pee Safe Toilet Seat Sanitizer Spray (75ml – Pack Of 6) – Mint| Reduces The Risk Of UTI & Other Infections | Kills 99.9% Germs & Travel Friendly | Anti Odour, Deodorizer

    Pee Safe Toilet Seat Sanitizer Spray (75ml – Pack Of 6) – Mint| Reduces The Risk Of UTI & Other Infections | Kills 99.9% Germs & Travel Friendly | Anti Odour, Deodorizer

    51GqWB82wQL41XeH2fZZOL51WcukBV8yL31HWt76gLSL
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]
    PeeSafe is an instant Toilet Seat sanitizer Spray which kills 99.9999% germs, without leaving any residual. It consists of IPA Formulation which starts action within 5 seconds of application. The small and compact bottle makes it travel friendly, providing you protection from bathroom borne diseases like Diarrhoea and Urinary Tract Infection on the go and at home.From the manufacturer : PeeSafe is an instant Toilet Seat Sanitizer Spray which protects against 99.99% germs, without leaving any residual. It consists of IPA Formulation which starts action within 5 seconds of application. The small and compact bottle makes it travel-friendly, providing you protection from bathroom borne diseases like Diarrhoea and Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) on the go and at home
    Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
    Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 10.8 x 7.3 x 15 cm; 420 Grams
    Date First Available ‏ : ‎ 23 September 2015
    Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Redcliffe Hygiene Private Limited
    ASIN ‏ : ‎ B015PRELWA
    Item model number ‏ : ‎ PEESAFE
    Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ India
    Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Redcliffe Hygiene Private Limited, Eclat Pharma & Aerosols Pvt Ltd, Borivali (East), Mumbai – 400 066
    Packer ‏ : ‎ Delhi
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 420 g
    Item Dimensions LxWxH ‏ : ‎ 10.8 x 7.3 x 15 Centimeters
    Net Quantity ‏ : ‎ 450.0 millilitre
    Generic Name ‏ : ‎ Toilet Seat Sanitizer

    Kills 99.99% germs
    Providing you protection from bathroom borne diseases like Diarrhoea and Urinary Tract Infection on the go and at home.
    The small and compact bottle makes it travel-friendly

    [ad_2]
    #Pee #Safe #Toilet #Seat #Sanitizer #Spray #75ml #Pack #Mint #Reduces #Risk #UTI #Infections #Kills #Germs #Travel #Friendly #Anti #Odour #Deodorizer

  • Pee Safe Toilet Seat Sanitizer Spray (75ml – Pack Of 3) – Mint| Reduces The Risk Of UTI & Other Infections | Kills 99.9% Germs & Travel Friendly | Anti Odour, Deodorizer

    Pee Safe Toilet Seat Sanitizer Spray (75ml – Pack Of 3) – Mint| Reduces The Risk Of UTI & Other Infections | Kills 99.9% Germs & Travel Friendly | Anti Odour, Deodorizer

    41hv+ 3rCzL511Zz10eeWL51MEe2jQkRL41SqCro+a5L
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]
    PeeSafe is an instant Toilet Seat sanitizer Spray which kills 99.9999% germs, without leaving any residual. It consists of IPA Formulation which starts action within 5 seconds of application. The small and compact bottle makes it travel friendly, providing you protection from bathroom borne diseases like Diarrhoea and Urinary Tract Infection on the go and at home. From the manufacturer : PeeSafe is an instant Toilet Seat Sanitizer Spray which protects against 99.99% germs, without leaving any residual. It consists of IPA Formulation which starts action within 5 seconds of application. The small and compact bottle makes it travel-friendly, providing you protection from bathroom borne diseases like Diarrhoea and Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) on the go and at home
    Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
    Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 10.7 x 3.7 x 15 cm; 130 Grams
    Date First Available ‏ : ‎ 8 July 2015
    Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Redcliffe Hygiene Private Limited
    ASIN ‏ : ‎ B01175322O
    Item model number ‏ : ‎ PEESAFE
    Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ India
    Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Redcliffe Hygiene Private Limited
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 130 g
    Item Dimensions LxWxH ‏ : ‎ 10.7 x 3.7 x 15 Centimeters
    Net Quantity ‏ : ‎ 225.0 millilitre

    Protects against germs and bacteria.
    Reduces the risk of bathroom borne diseases like Diarrhoea and Urinary Tract Infection (UTI).
    Travel-friendly, easy to carry aerosol spray bottle.
    Can also be used on other toilet surfaces like taps, flush and door handles.

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    #Pee #Safe #Toilet #Seat #Sanitizer #Spray #75ml #Pack #Mint #Reduces #Risk #UTI #Infections #Kills #Germs #Travel #Friendly #Anti #Odour #Deodorizer

  • “Country is in safe hands”: Kangana Ranaut reacts to Salman Khan receiving death threat

    “Country is in safe hands”: Kangana Ranaut reacts to Salman Khan receiving death threat

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    Haridwar: Actor Kangana Ranaut on Sunday reacted to Salman Khan receiving death threats, saying that the country is in the safe hands of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah and therefore there is nothing to fear about security.

    She said, “We are actors. Salman Khan has been provided with security by the Centre. He is getting protection from Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah, then there is nothing to fear.”

    “When I was threatened, I was also given security by the government, today the country is in safe hands. We have nothing to worry about,” she added.

    MS Education Academy

    Ranaut visited Haridwar on Sunday and performed Ganga Aarti. She would also be visiting Kedarnath Dham after this.

    The actor said, “I always wanted to visit Kedarnath Dham and finally that is happening.”

    Salman Khan has been provided with Y+ category security by the Mumbai Police amid the death threat.

    On Saturday, Salman shared his experience and how he is dealing with it at India TV’s show ‘Aap ki Adalat’ that, “Security is better than insecurity. Yes security is there. Now it is not possible to ride a bicycle on the road and go alone anywhere. And more than that, now I have this problem that when I am in traffic, then there is so much security, vehicles creating inconvenience to other people. They also give me a look. And my poor fans. There is a serious threat that’s why there is security.”

    He added, “I am doing whatever I have been told. There is a dialogue ‘Kisi Ka Bhai Kisi Ki Jaan’ ‘they have to be lucky 100 times, I have to be lucky once’. So, I got to be very careful.”

    Salman continued, “I am going everywhere with full security. I know whatever is going to happen will happen no matter what you do. I believe that (points towards god) that he is there. It is not that I will start roaming freely, it is not like that. Now there are so many Shera’s around me, so many guns are going around with me that I am myself scared these days.”

    Following the death threat, few days ago, a minor was arrested by Mumbai Police for allegedly threatening to kill Salman.

    Mumbai Police said that a threat call was made to the Mumbai Police control room on April 10. The caller, who identified himself as Rockey Bhai from Jodhpur in Rajasthan, said he was a Gau Rakshak (cow-vigilante). The caller threatened to “eliminate” Salman Khan on April 30.

    Mumbai Police added revealed the caller was found to be a minor. “As of now, we don’t think the call should be taken seriously. But we are probing why the minor behaved in such a way,” an officer said.

    On March 26, one person identified as Dhakad Ram, a resident of Luni in Rajasthan’s Jodhpur district, was arrested for sending a threat mail to Salman. He was apprehended and taken into custody.

    A case was registered at Bandra police station. The accused, in his mail, alleged that the superstar will meet the same fate as “Sidhu Moosewala.”

    “A case has registered at Bandra police station with regard to emailed threats to kill Salman Khan. In a joint operation, Mumbai Police and Luni police teams caught the accused, Dhakad Ram, a resident of Luni in Jodhpur district,” Ishwar Chand Pareek, an officer at Luni police station of Jodhpur told ANI earlier.

    Khan has been provided with Y+ category security by the Mumbai police after assessing threat perceptions. The Maharashtra government assigned security escorts to the superstar after the actor received a threat letter from the Lawrence Bishnoi gang.

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    #Country #safe #hands #Kangana #Ranaut #reacts #Salman #Khan #receiving #death #threat

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • I am finally out of Sudan with my family, and safe – no thanks to the British government | Leila Latif

    I am finally out of Sudan with my family, and safe – no thanks to the British government | Leila Latif

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    I am writing this from Egypt, having completed a chaotic, two-day journey from Khartoum with my husband, children, sister, aunt, cousins and dozens of other people from across the world. The sound of gunfire and shelling is gone. We are safe. But this is no thanks to the UK government or British embassy in Sudan, both of which totally failed us. We are safe because we took matters into our own hands.

    Nothing prepares you for the sound of war, which started echoing around us on the morning of Saturday 15 April, as fighting broke out between the Sudanese armed forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. We were based in the suburbs of Khartoum and had access to electricity, running water and wifi. Some of my friends and family were not so lucky; their homes were damaged or even destroyed. Heavy fighting at the main airport meant trying to escape that way was futile.

    At first the plan was to look after those in the worst of it, grabbing whoever we could during the pockets of quiet around iftar at dusk, and bringing them to the safety of our home. Then we had to think about saving ourselves. Artillery was landing in the garden and none of the ceasefires seemed to be holding for more than a couple of minutes.

    I am a dual-national, British and Sudanese, and my husband and children are British citizens – so we contacted the embassy. We were told it was not possible for the person we had reached out to in Sudan to pass on our details to the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office for data protection reasons. So we were advised to ask someone do this on our behalf from the UK. A kind friend in London spent all day with copies of our passports and pins of our locations – and that seemed to work. Several days later we got an email confirming we had been registered, but that there was no plan: we were to just stay indoors and not to reply to the email as it was not monitored.

    Slowly but surely it became apparent that the British response wasn’t working. News that the UK ambassador, his deputy and other senior staff were out of the country didn’t help: our lives were in the hands of a group of people who thought that during a period of rising tensions it would be fine for the embassy’s senior staff to have some R&R.

    In the days that followed, friends texted me sounding thrilled, as the headlines were giving the impression that we would be rescued in hours. In reality we knew nothing, and were getting automated text messages asking us to fill out the same form that we’d already filled out. Some friends joined a UN convoy that was heading to Port Sudan where boats to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia were running. It was chaotic, but they made it. Meanwhile, those “remain indoors” texts were discouraging Britons from joining the convoy.

    The final straw for us came on Saturday 22 April when Dutch, French, Italian and Greek citizens – not diplomats – were informed they would be flown back home from an airstrip in Khartoum (this happened on the Sunday and Monday, as the Eid ceasefire was coming to an end). We called the British consulate one last time, wondering if this meant we would be flown out too. We were told in no uncertain terms there were no plans for evacuation, despite what all these other countries were pulling off. Embassy staff and their families were the lucky beneficiaries of the UK’s “complex and rapid evacuation” – as Rishi Sunak put it on Twitter – while ordinary British nationals were left to fend for themselves.

    So we felt we had no choice but to book seats on a private bus with friends and family, and make the long drive north to the Egyptian border. We set off late morning on Sunday. My husband, kids and I each carried a small backpack with food that quickly perished in the roasting heat.

    We drove past tanks, fires and large groups of soldiers. Men with machine guns got on board the bus twice on our way out of the capital. Outside Khartoum things progressed more quickly and we zoomed up the road. For the first time in over a week, time passed without the sound of bullets and bombs. We went past everything I love about Sudan: palm orchards, sweeping rivers and thousands of people that deserve so much better than any of this.

    We drove through the night and reached the Egyptian border on Monday. But crossing proved difficult. Visas had to be pre-approved and my sister in London frantically arranged ours from there. We ended up spending the night at the border, sleeping outside until the sun rose. Phone calls were coming from those still in Khartoum, Sudanese and British alike, saying the gunfire was getting worse. I felt intensely grateful to be lying on the pavement, surrounded by those I cared about, safe at last.

    Many of our party were denied entry, including some British citizens – the British government again seemed to have made no effort to help its citizens get safe passage to Egypt despite its close ties with the country. On Tuesday morning we started heading for the city of Aswan, and hoped to be flying back to London soon.

    You’re hearing a lot about the British government and the coherence of its evacuation plan. Don’t believe a word of it. At the time of writing, its people are stuck in Port Sudan, waiting for a ship. According to the latest headlines, amid a “fragile truce”, the government will finally begin evacuating British nationals from Khartoum today. I’ll believe it when I see it.

    At the border, a final ping came from the FCDO telling me to stay indoors and asking me to fill out that form for the sixth time. This time I replied: “Fuck you.”

    Leila Latif is a freelance writer and critic



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    #finally #Sudan #family #safe #British #government #Leila #Latif
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘The GDR was safe for me’: Disney drama tells story of former East Germany’s first black police officer

    ‘The GDR was safe for me’: Disney drama tells story of former East Germany’s first black police officer

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    In the dying days of the German Democratic Republic, a group of peace activists gather in a church in Dresden to discuss the more bottom-up, less authoritarian country they would like to see emerge out of the crumbling socialist state.

    A mixed-race man on one of the back rows speaks up. “You have no idea of the rage that’s out there”, he says. “If you lock people up in a cage for life then at some point they will find someone to blame for that. Someone who’s different. And you want to abolish this state? The last bit that keeps people from going crazy?”

    The scene, from the opening episode of Sam: A Saxon, a seven-part mini-series that premieres on Disney+ on Wednesday, is designed to explain what could have motivated the young man on the back row to do what he did next.

    Samuel Meffire, the real-life inspiration for the character played by the German actor Malick Bauer, went on to join the police, becoming the first officer of African descent in the former East Germany, which at the time was notorious for racist violence, and the face of a poster campaign to show a different side to the former GDR. He would soon grow frustrated with his employer’s sluggish bureaucracy, switch sides and end up on Germany’s most wanted list for armed robbery.

    The series – Disney’s first original series produced in Germany – does not aspire to challenge storytelling conventions, but it manages in unexpected ways to cut across the often told story of the “peaceful revolution” of 1989 – as well as contemporary debates about law enforcement’s treatment of black people.

    “The GDR was not colour-blind,” Meffire, 52, said in an interview with the Guardian. “But it made public spaces colour-blind enough that I could move safely in them. No one would have dared do me harm in public because they would have known that the men with the iron brooms would have swept them up if they did.”

    “Of course, that’s an incredibly fine line, to sing a hymn to law enforcement in a dictatorship,” he added. “I don’t mean to sing the praises of a dictatorship, but of the fact that it was safe for me. And I want our democratic state to make us equally safe, wherever we go.”

    Now living in Bonn, in western Germany, he said he would not take his two children on a holiday to the eastern state where he grew up.

    About 95,000 migrant workers from socialist “brother states” such as Mozambique, Angola, Cuba and Vietnam were registered as living in East Germany in the year that the Berlin Wall fell, though their stay was strictly limited and social mixing with the local population was discouraged by the regime.

    Meffire’s father, a Cameroonian engineering student, died two hours before he was born in July 1970, in circumstances that remain unclear: one theory proposed by his mother is that he was poisoned by officials who tried to chemically castrate him.

    For “Ossis [East Germans] of colour” such as Meffire, the end of the old regime nonetheless brought a dramatic loss of personal safety. In his memoir, Me, a Saxon, published in English translation by the British publisher Dialogue Books this spring and co-written by the playwright Lothar Kittstein, Meffire, a self-described “fantasy nerd”, describes the outbreak of racist violence in starker, quasi-apocalyptic terms.

    “The neo-something is now part of the normal cityscape during the day, too,” he writes. “The vampires are bound to the night no longer. They have acquitted themselves from this spell. And the well-behaved, demoralised citizens applauded them.”

    A string of racist attacks in the old eastern states made the east’s problem with the radical right hard for the reunified country to ignore. In September 1991, neo-Nazis rioted for five days in the Saxon town of Hoyerswerda, their attacks on an apartment block housing asylum seekers cheered on by some of the locals.

    A western German PR company hired to improve Saxony’s image after these attacks seized on Meffire: a photograph of the shaven-headed police officer in a black rollneck underneath the words “A Saxon” was printed on billboards around Dresden and in newspapers across the entire country.

    A scene from Sam: A Saxon
    A scene from Sam: A Saxon, launching on Disney+ this week. Photograph: Yohana Papa Onyango

    A friendship with Saxony’s reformist interior minister Heinz Eggert further boosted Meffire’s status as the poster boy for Saxony’s police force, but also made him new enemies among his colleagues. Two years after the publicity campaign, he left to set up his own private security agency but struggled to make the business pay.

    In 1995, Meffire was involved in a string of armed robberies and went on the run in France and what was then Zaire – now the Democratic Republic of the Congo – where he was caught up in the first Congo war and eventually extradited to Germany. After serving seven years in prison, he now works as a social worker, security contractor and author.

    Both the written and the filmic treatment of Meffire’s story explain his rapid disillusionment with the police by hinting at old political networks that held a protecting hand over the neo-Nazi scene. His verdict on his former colleagues, however, is surprisingly positive. “Hate stories and racism?” he writes. “Not towards me.” One officer who made abusive remarks about his skin colour was quickly reprimanded by his colleagues.

    The Disney series, which Meffire and the film-maker Jörg Winger unsuccessfully pitched to Germany’s public broadcasters in 2006, achieves two rare feats for a German production, telling a story with a mainly afrodeutsch set of main characters, without presenting their experiences in a one-dimensional way.

    In the third episode, Meffire falls in with a group of black East German men who have little time for black political activists from the west, who they dismiss as “beaten-down dogs”. That division, Meffire says, still runs through Germany’s black communities.

    “When it comes to the police, there are two perspectives,” he said. “I am a victim – of state despotism, of racial profiling, or at the very least of an … ignorance towards things that shouldn’t take place.

    “And then there’s the other view, which is absolutely a minority, that says if we want a diverse police force then we have to step up and shape that police force. And that doesn’t just apply to the police, but also the intelligence community, the military, the judiciary. Because speaking for myself, I don’t know a single black German public prosecutor and not a single black German judge.”

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    #GDR #safe #Disney #drama #tells #story #East #Germanys #black #police #officer
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • SPARVA Baby Bath Support, Pink – Super Comfortable and Safe Baby Bather

    SPARVA Baby Bath Support, Pink – Super Comfortable and Safe Baby Bather

    41wpHYhRNSL411r+2MMIoL41yW3Sl8HqL51zrFl7HTCL51mnYR7DboL41LSb4rfd3L
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]
    Designed for baby's comfort and safety. Soft mesh material is gentle on baby's delicate skin while it helps the water drain out while bathing.
    HYGIENIC AND MILDEW RESISTANT – Features drain holes that allow soapy water to be rinsed away easily
    DURABLE, LIGHTWEIGHT – The Bath support is designed to keep its shape over time
    USE DIRECTLY IN BATHTUB/SHOWER – Easy to use on a daily basis, fits inside bathtubs and shower areas
    EASY TO STORE – Includes built in hook for convenient storage

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    #SPARVA #Baby #Bath #Support #Pink #Super #Comfortable #Safe #Baby #Bather

  • BONIRY Baby Nail Trimmer,Baby Nail Clippers Safe for Newborn Toddler Adult Toes Fingernails Care Trim Kit 6 Grinding Heads,Baby Grooming kit for Baby Care kit for New Born, (N-T Green)

    BONIRY Baby Nail Trimmer,Baby Nail Clippers Safe for Newborn Toddler Adult Toes Fingernails Care Trim Kit 6 Grinding Heads,Baby Grooming kit for Baby Care kit for New Born, (N-T Green)

    41lBbcf8etL51kpOwON0LL41yySB6NImL51yojsqYsKL31LiIJ519aL41YCXM+iuLL51NuRoUWroL41nbTO46CEL
    Price: [price_with_discount]
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    ISRHEWs
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    6 GRINDING HEAD SPN-JGSP
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