Tag: sitting

  • Woman sitting in park dragged into car, gang-raped in Bangalore

    Woman sitting in park dragged into car, gang-raped in Bangalore

    [ad_1]

    Bengaluru: A young woman, who was sitting in a park with her male friend, was forcibly dragged into a car and gang-raped, police said on Friday.

    The case has been reported in the Koramangala police station limits.

    The police have arrested a gang of four persons in connection with the case. The arrested accused have been identified as Satish, Vijay, Sridhar and Kiran.

    According to police, the incident took place late night of March 25. The young woman was sitting with her male friend at the National Games Village Park. The accused persons threatened her male friend and dragged her into the car.

    The victim told police that she was gang-raped in the moving car. The police said that the accused drove the car to Domlur, Indiranagar, Anekal and Nice Road and committed the crime throughout the night.

    The accused later left her near her residence in the early hours of March 26. After reaching home at 4 a.m, the victim was taken to a hospital, and later lodged a complaint with the police.

    The victim was with her male friend inside NGV when the accused tried to moral police them. Post an argument, the girl’s friend left the spot.

    The accused then dragged the girl into his car with 3 others, raped her all night & dropped her back to her home near Ejipura



    [ad_2]
    #Woman #sitting #park #dragged #car #gangraped #Bangalore

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Biden’s Education secretary is done sitting ‘idly’ amid schools fight

    Biden’s Education secretary is done sitting ‘idly’ amid schools fight

    [ad_1]

    Cardona advocated for tighter gun laws after last year’s killings at Robb Elementary and has warned that the country risks failing students in Covid-19’s wake. Yet his newly public exasperation with school-centered partisanship comes as the Republican-controlled House approved sweeping “Parents Bill of Rights” legislation that captures broad strokes of pandemic-era conservative education wars.

    “When we talk about politicization, when we talk about book banning, when we talk about Black history curriculum being picked apart — I think there are deliberate attempts to make sure that our public schools are not functional so that the private option sounds better,” the education secretary said. “I don’t doubt that’s intentional.”

    Elections are also at play.

    Nearly 30,000 school board seats are on the ballot this year across the country.

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — a likely 2024 Republican presidential candidate who weighed in on school board races last year — has tapped conservative energy with a range of education issues. He signed one measure restricting how gender identities are discussed with schoolchildren, launched a feud over an Advanced Placement African American history course, and is primed to sign major private school voucher legislation.

    Biden’s other potential challengers also frame their education concerns with a distinct culture war bent.

    Conservatives say they’re the ones on the defensive. Many Republican governors and lawmakers argue their restrictions on classroom lessons, curriculum, and LGBTQ students are meant to blunt diversity initiatives run amok or what they see as the misapplication of legal protections to include transgender people.

    Some Republican groups are also looking to combine a longstanding push for expansive school choice programs with renewed efforts to harness more power on local school boards.

    “Many school board members are intertwined with biased political ideologies and are controlled by special interests groups like the teachers unions,” said Laura Zorc, the education reform director at the conservative FreedomWorks organization, after Florida lawmakers sent their school choice bill to DeSantis.

    “The only way parents can ensure that their children receive a high quality education is if state educational dollars, traditionally earmarked for local school districts, are directed to parents who want the very best for their children,” Zorc said in a statement.

    Cardona’s public frustration dovetails with a growing political counteroffensive from White House allies.

    National Education Association President Becky Pringle and American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten recently denounced DeSantis during an Orlando rally, and Weingarten is scheduled to deliver an address “in defense of public education” in Washington this week.

    The Democratic Party of Illinois last week unveiled what it called an unprecedented effort to endorse dozens of candidates in nonpartisan local school and library board races. It also plans to funnel nearly $300,000 into an advertising and organizing campaign surrounding those elections.

    Amid all this tension, Cardona has wielded recent op-eds in Newsweek and the Tampa Bay Times to accuse Republicans of “hiding behind the guise of ‘parents’ rights’” to defund public schools and trying to “hijack” classroom discussions.

    And the secretary met last week with school superintendent and teacher representatives, who, he said, “feel the same way.”

    “It just seems like it’s a constant attack on what I know as a dad, and what I know as an educator, is happening in our schools,” Cardona said in the interview. “Education being used to divide communities is the challenge that we face now as leaders.”

    That challenge, he told state superintendents assembled in Washington last week, “is even harder than what we had in 2020” when Covid-19 first shuttered schools.

    “Our students are as [emotionally] dysregulated as they ever have been in the last twenty years. The surgeon general reminded us that we’re in a youth mental health crisis, where one in three high school girls has considered suicide in the last three years,” Cardona told POLITICO. “I’m tired of folks looking to get political points by attacking vulnerable students, vulnerable communities and attacking our schools.”

    He added: “If we’re not standing up for our students, who will? I feel it’s time.”

    [ad_2]
    #Bidens #Education #secretary #sitting #idly #schools #fight
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Sonia attends joint sitting of Parliament as senior Cong leaders stuck in Kashmir

    Sonia attends joint sitting of Parliament as senior Cong leaders stuck in Kashmir

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: Congress leader Sonia Gandhi sat alone in her designated front row bench in Parliament’s Central Hall during the president’s address on Tuesday as senior leaders of her party remained stuck in Srinagar due to bad weather, after attending an event to mark the culmination of the Bharat Jodo Yatra.

    However, a steady stream of leaders from across the aisle approached Sonia Gandhi and exchanged pleasantries.

    Before the joint sitting began, BJP MPs were seen congratulating J P Nadda, whose term as party president was extended till June 2024, as he entered the Parliament building.

    Gandhi, who is usually flanked by senior party colleagues, was also greeted by both President Droupadi Murmu and Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar.

    Union minister Jyotiraditya Scindia, who was sitting near Sonia Gandhi, was also seen leaning and speaking to her.

    Gandhi, however, was seen engaged in a conversation for around half an hour with TMC’s Rajya Sabha MP Derek O’Brien who was sitting a row behind her.

    Incidentally, the TMC had earlier said the party had not been called to join the Congress’ Bharat Jodo Yatra.

    O’Brien and Gandhi were seen having a lengthy conversation before Murmu’s speech began.

    Putting political rivalries aside, AIADMK leader M Thambi Durai and DMK’s TR Baalu were seen smiling and hugging each other while having a conversation with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    After the Economic Survey was presented and the Lok Sabha was adjourned for the day, PM Modi also enquired from Chirag Paswan about his mother’s health.

    In her first address to the joint sitting of Parliament on the first day of the Budget session, President Droupadi Murmu on Tuesday said the country has a government that is “stable, fearless, decisive”, giving thrust to ‘virasat’ (heritage) as well as ‘vikas’ (development) and working for all classes without any discrimination.

    Friendly vibes were visible among different party MPs during the joint sitting of Parliament.

    A bench, which usually seats five people, was seen being shared by six MPs from three different parties — NCP’s Supriya Sule, DMK’s Kanimozhi, TMC’s Saugata Ray and BJP leaders, Neeraj Shekhar, Shivkumar Udasi and Nishikant Dubey.

    During the speech, BJP MPs were seen thumping their desks frequently, which the opposition claimed they were instructed to do so.

    [ad_2]
    #Sonia #attends #joint #sitting #Parliament #senior #Cong #leaders #stuck #Kashmir

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )