New Delhi: A 14-year-old girl injured herself with a blade and then cooked up a story that she was injured during a scuffle and also molested by three boys in east Delhi’s Bhajanpura area, a police official said on Monday.
Deputy Commissioner of Police, Northeast, Joy Tirkey said that police had initially registered a case under relevant sections of Pocso Act and Indian Penal Code’s sections of molestation and kidnapping but later withdrew it when the girl confessed that she had made up the story.
The incident was reported on March 15 at Bhajanpura police station.
“A school-going girl had reported that when she was returning from her school, she was stopped by 2-3 unknown boys and they had taken her to some place, molested and physically assaulted her. Her medical examination as well as counselling by the Member of the DCW were got conducted,” the DCP said.
“During investigation, CCTV footage near the place of occurrence as identified by the victim was checked, and it was found out that no such incident took place at the place and time told by the victim,” he added.
The official said that the victim was again counselled and examined in which she stated that her Class 10 board examinations were going on and her Social Studies paper had not gone well and she was afraid that her parents might be disappointed.
“She had caused the injury to herself and narrated the concocted story to her parents. Accordingly, the victim girl was produced before the Magistrate where she reiterated her last statement,” said the official.
SRINAGAR: The curtains rose to the sound of water gushing and birds chirping, offering an idea of a serene spot lacking noise and visibility. Melodious background music added to the sensory appeal.
As soon as the stage lit up, a beautiful set-up of the village could be seen. Heemal, played by Zareena Ali, came to wash dishes as any normal village girl. Shahi Mumtaz gave voice to the character in the play. As Heemal was seen dancing, her friend played by Jameela Akhter asked for the reason. The whole conversation took place in a rhythmic manner exhibiting the poetic capacity of the two Kashmir women. Heemal expressed her happiness over her marriage tie-up that had taken place a day before.
It was the play surrounding the life of Arinmal, a Kashmiri poetess, who has left behind a lot of poetry and lived an interesting life. The next scene showed up two men explaining the life of Heemal. She was born in a Hindu family in Palhalan (Baramulla). Born in 1718, when Kashmir was misruled by Afghans. Intelligent and beautiful, the conversation suggested that she wanted to study, but women’s education was not in vogue.
The cast line of theatre play Arinmaal that was staged in Tagore Hall Srinagar on March 3, 2023. KL Image: Bilal Bahadur
Her parents, however, provided her with all the possible education, they could afford within the confines of their Palhalan home. She was fond of poetry and literature.
At a very young age, she was married to Bhawani Das Kachroo, a resident of Rainawari in Srinagar, who worked on a very high post in administration. Besides, he was also a good Persian poet and wrote under the name Naikoo. Heemal nodded for the marriage for the common love of literature among both of them. This was the point from where she was known as Arnimaal.
The play was presented by Saath Theatre Group, directed, written and designed by Manzoor Ahmed Mir. The music direction was done by Raja Bilal. The songs in the play were sung by Shahi Mumtaz and recorded at Folk Studio Srinagar.
Palhalan’s Arinmaal
The couple loved each other immensely until the day Bhavani Das returned home drunk. He was furious at Arnimaal and accused her of causing him humiliation. Unaware of the cause that frustrated the Afghan coutier, she insisted but failed to elicit a response. Following days Bhavani Das became alcoholic and frequented Srinagar’s dance bars.
When Arnimaal came to know about her husband’s new found refuge in dancing, she made efforts to get him out of bars. In an attempt to make her husband fall in love again, she practiced singing and dancing. Even though she struggled hard but he did not give up.
In fact, when Bhavani Das learned about it, he raised her hand against her and defended himself by saying that the religion, culture and society gives man the freedom to do whatever he wants. She refuted him politely which worsened the situation between them. He asked her to leave his home. However, she stayed back. Bhavani Das spent most of the time outside. Nobody talked to her.
Meanwhile, she planned to go back to her parents many times, but her intellect did not allow her. Eventually, one day, an angry Bhavani Das succeeded in throwing her out of his home.
Arnimaal went back to Palhalan where she waited for him for several years without any change in her love towards her estranged husband. On the other hand, Bhavani’s hate also remained unchanged.
Eventually she lost her sane self and turned old and dull. She died on the same place where the play started. Bhavani’s servant was provoking him against Arnimaal. When the news of Bhavani’s behaviour reached the governor, he was upset. After facing humiliation, Bhavani Das went to Palhalan but it was late already as she was no more. He arrived when the funeral of Arnimaal was going on. He regretted his actions. The darkness that would follow was shown by the lights that turned off marking the end of the play.
Throughout the play, Arnimaal sang songs that explained and detailed the situation she was in. The dresses chosen for Arnimaal in the play also added to the character that shifted from modest when she was unmarried to bright and glittery during her marriage, then simple but colourful during the conflict and completely dull towards the end.
The Arnimaal cast line included Zareena Ali, her friend by Jameela Akhter, Bhavani Das Kachroo by Ashraf Nagoo. The narrators in the play were Mehrajuddin Bhat, Reyaz Ahmed Mir, Haseena Sofi, Farid Ahmed Sheikh. The dancer was played by Midhat. Other artists were Shagufta Rehman, Ghulam Mohammed Bhagat, Manzoor ul Islam Bhagat, M Iqbal Bhagat, Irfan Ahmad Bhagat, Manzoor Ahmad Bhat and Bilal Ahmad Bhat. The properties were provided by Gulzar Ahmad Dar, costumes by Shaheen Masarat, Set by Mir Adil, Make-up by Aijaz Ahmad. The lights were operated by Tariq Hajini.
New Delhi: Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya on Saturday released a book titled “India’s Vaccine Growth Story – From Cowpox to Vaccine Maitri” at the World Book Fair here at Pragati Maidan.
The book authored by Sajjan Singh Yadav, Additional Secretary, Union Finance Ministry, elaborates on India’s achievement in developing, producing and distributing Covid-19 vaccines.
Speaking on the occasion, Mandaviya said that India administered 2.2 billion doses as a part of the world’s largest Covid vaccination drive without any shortages across the nation, which resulted in saving 3.4 million lives.
The minister also highlighted that when other countries were struggling with vaccine hesitancy, India set an exemplary pro-vaccination Covid management model.
“It gives me immense pleasure to see research, manufacturing and vaccine drive has been portrayed in comprehensive fashion that recounts not just the pandemic crisis but also delves into vaccine history, that can be traced 2500 years back,” Mandaviya added.
He urged writers to come to fore, stating that “research-based documentation is a medium that can bring to light India’s heritage, illustrating to the world possibilities and solutions, as India’s Covid-19 trajectory has done, leaning on our traditional roots and heritage”.
“Our heritage reflects our knowledge and science that have stood the test of time, and proven exemplary in times of crisis,” he added.
In the book, the author has also delved upon future challenges that may emerge for vaccinology and new vistas for the growth of Indian vaccine industry in a candid manner.
Thiruvananthapuram: Last September, 31-year-old Anoop M who won Rs 25 crore in a lottery, was famously heard saying “I wish I had not won.” He said he was hassled by people known and unknown to him asking for financial help. Today, Anoop is a part of the state government’s lottery business and is arguably Kerala’s only crorepati lottery agent.
Anoop, a former auto driver is now busy listing out the serial numbers of the Kerala State Lotteries and contacting prospective clients to sell his tickets.
His sleek iPhone seems stuck to his ear as he is heard interacting with customers in his newly opened lottery retail store ‘M A Lucky Centre’.
Until a few weeks ago, Anoop, winner of the biggest draw in Kerala Lottery history – the Thiruvonam Bumper, was on the run. He was mastering the art of giving the slip to people who sought financial help from him.
He had to constantly shift his place of residence so that needy people would stop crowding his house. As things have calmed down now, his newly won luxurious lifestyle is slowly falling in place.
“Nothing much has changed,” Anoop said while pulling out a bundle of letters and postcards from the cupboard. “I still get countless letters, all asking for financial aid and many still visit my shop asking for help. I am tired,” Anoop, sporting a thick gold bracelet and a thicker gold chain around his neck, told PTI.
Anoop is a glittering microcosm of a Kerala government-owned lottery business which is now creating a millionaire everyday.
The Kerala Lottery department has more than 1 lakh registered agents. Under them there are several unregistered sub-agents and hawkers, effectively making it the livelihood for several lakhs of people in the state.
The total turnover in FY-21 was Rs 7,145.22 crore. Out of that Rs 4,079.28 crore was spent towards prizes, Rs. 1,798.32 crore towards discounts to the agents, and Rs.524.3 crore towards agents’ prizes.
“It is the government’s policy to seek public participation in the government’s social welfare schemes. All the money collected through lottery sales are used for implementing various social welfare schemes of the government,” B T Anil Kumar, publicity officer of the Directorate of State Lotteries, told PTI.
It is not just the Keralites who are keenly purchasing these tickets. The residents of neighboring states and also the sizable migrant labor population in Kerala are regular buyers and many are winners as well.
The ups and downs faced by the state’s lottery winners have even led the lottery directorate to start a training program in financial management for prize winners with the help of the Gulati Institute of Taxation.
“It is the policy of the government to encourage all citizens of this country to be part of the Kerala Lottery. As per the Lottery Act, the tickets can be sold only within the geographical boundaries of Kerala. But anyone who visits the state can purchase a ticket and claim the prize amount by producing the necessary documents and the original of the ticket,” Kumar said.
With a growing customer base, many are now looking to sell lottery tickets as their main occupation.
“I need to pay my house rent with this, fund the education of my children, take care of my husband who is unwell and also take care of myself. I have been selling lotteries for the last 11 years,” Sathi Kumari, who is a lottery hawker near the Padmanabha Swamy temple in Thiruvananthapuram said. There are several thousand like Kumari who depend on the money they get from the lottery sales to eke out a living.
According to government statistics, the revenue of a lottery worker has gone up from 8.4 percent of ticket sales and commission from prize money per draw in 2019 to 10.69 percent in 2022. “We now have a lottery for all the days of the week, so the revenue of the lottery workers has also gone up. We have also increased the number of tickets available for sale,” Anil Kumar said.
The government also runs a welfare fund for lottery agents and sellers. One percent of the total revenue turnover is earmarked for this fund, which is being used for providing financial assistance for the treatment of the members, providing tri-scooter or beach umbrellas for physically challenged members, and also providing an Onam allowance to all the members. In the last six years, more than Rs 200 crore has been disbursed to the members through this welfare scheme.
Kerala’s state-owned lottery system was launched during the second term of the EMS Namboodiripad government in 1967, with an aim to boost state revenue and also to provide a stable income model for the unemployed and differently-abled persons. It now has prize money from Rs 100 to Rs 25 crore through its daily and six bumper lotteries.
A comprehensive security system with watermarks, security codes and safety numbers on tickets, ensure safety and prevent counterfeiting, rigging or other malpractices, officials said, adding that the prize money is distributed only after the security wing of the lottery directorate examines the physical ticket for any irregularity.
Lottery is legal in over a dozen states in India and the remaining states have banned sale of lottery tickets. Despite criticism from some quarters including from Governor Arif Mohammed Khan who had said Kerala was making its poor people spend their earnings on lottery tickets and getting them addicted to alcohol, the state government promoted its lottery business briskly and earned revenues of over Rs 7,000 crore last year.
Gleaming with delight over people like Anoop joining the lottery business, Anil Kumar said “It’s truly inspirational that Anoop thought of becoming a lottery agent. It will inspire other youngsters also to take up lottery selling as a viable livelihood option, despite their financial status.” PTI KPK VPS SA
In early May 2009, 12 men arrived in La Rochelle on the west coast of France, carrying a few pairs of Speedos in their luggage. They had not come to swim but, as they liked to put it, to “fly”. Their sport, which involves diving from cliffs, buildings or bridges, always comes with an atmosphere of nervous excitement, but this time the stakes were higher than ever before. Cliff diving had long been at the obscure end of extreme sports, a pursuit for thrill-seekers with day jobs. Now, the energy drink company Red Bull was launching what it called a “cliff diving world series”, with eight events scheduled across the summer that would attract hundreds of thousands of spectators. Here was a chance at fame and, if not fortune, for the very best of the divers, a modest living.
In traditional pool diving, the highest event is the 10-metre platform, and even Olympic divers can find the height unsettling. In La Rochelle, the organisers had affixed a short platform to the ramparts of the medieval Saint Nicolas Tower, 26 metres above the frigid sea – as high as an eight-storey building. In their three seconds of flight, the divers would reach speeds of more than 50mph. At that speed, a head-first entry is too dangerous. They would need to break the water with their feet, trying to make as little splash as possible. In each of their three competitive jumps, the divers could take off facing forwards, backwards or, most terrifyingly, from a handstand position. As they fell, they would do as many twists and somersaults as they dared in order to impress the judges before hitting the sea. Make a mistake and it was like you’d “run full speed into a wall”, as the Colombian Orlando Duque, the favourite to win the new series, explained at the time.
The Duke, as he was known, was 34, charismatic and handsome, with a long ponytail that trailed behind him as he flew. His main rivals were veteran high divers who’d come from as far as Australia, Russia and the US. There were a few novices, too, including one from England. Gary Hunt was 24, skinny and pale. He was still so inexperienced from such heights that he wore two pairs of Speedos for extra protection. A Red Bull photographer later recalled that when he approached Hunt that year “he often looked at me with a suspicious, sidelong glance and quickly shuffled away”. Hunt was an introvert, but there was another reason for his reticence. He was emerging from a mental breakdown following the death of his best friend two years earlier.
Hunt went on to take third place in La Rochelle, and as the 2009 season progressed, it became clear that he was a natural. Like all the best divers, he had an acute sense of aerial awareness, always knowing where he was in the air, even as he spun and somersaulted. No matter how elaborate his routine, he was able to enter the water safely. Then there were the qualities that set Hunt apart: his preternatural calmness and his imagination. One of the major challenges of cliff diving as a competitive sport is that it is very difficult to practise in advance from the full height. At the time of Hunt’s first season, there were no training facilities with platforms high enough. (Today, there are just three, in Austria, the US and China.) For that reason, high divers had only ever performed routines that could also be done from a 10-metre platform in the pool. Hunt wanted to try something more ambitious, an unprecedented dive that made the most of the elevation from which he would be falling. He realised that there was only one way to proceed. He would have to practise his new dive in pieces, and then, on the day of competition, put it all together for the first time.
At the fourth event of the tour, in Antalya, Turkey, Hunt felt ready to try. Before the start, when the athletes informed the judges what dives they would perform, Hunt described a routine that had never been attempted before in any sort of diving: a triple somersault, with four twists – the triple quad. It would be, as Duque put it, “the most difficult dive ever done”.
Not everyone was pleased. The score for a dive is calculated by multiplying the judges’ marks for execution by a number rating the degree of difficulty. One of Hunt’s rivals publicly complained that he was trying to win by degree of difficulty, which was “not the right way”. Other divers worried he would get hurt. “We were like, dude, slow down, don’t push yourself, this is high risk,” recalled Hunt’s friend and fellow competitor Steve Black. He knew what he was talking about – his previous job included performing at a stunt show where he was set on fire before leaping into a tank of water in the dark.
Hunt ignored the criticism and the advice. He didn’t win with his triple quad in Turkey, but he did in the next competition. At the last stop of the season, he introduced another new dive, and won again. Overall that season, he finished tied on points with The Duke, who was crowned champion, having won more of the individual competitions. Hunt was content. He hadn’t set out to win the series, he told an interviewer during the season, but to explore his potential.
Going into the 2010 season, he was more confident: he ditched his second pair of swimming briefs. After winning the first three events, he announced another radical innovation: a running take-off from the platform. It worked in the practice rounds in Polignano a Mare, a seaside town on Italy’s heel, but in competition his timing was slightly out, and his chest and head slammed into the water. The safety divers, who wait in the water for the diver to land and then follow them under in case they get injured or lose consciousness, helped him on to a jetski and he was treated in hospital for concussion. For two weeks he couldn’t move his shoulders or neck. One week after that he was back on the platform for the next competition, staring down at a lake far below.
Since that inaugural season in 2009, when he finished second, Hunt has been on a run of dominance that would be extraordinary in any sport, winning 42 of 82 Red Bull cliff diving events, and nine of 11 world series titles. The other two times he was runner-up. He is, unquestionably, the greatest cliff diver of all time, “the Michael Jordan, the Muhammad Ali, the Tiger Woods” of the sport, as Steven LoBue, an American diver who had the misfortune of competing against Hunt for many years, put it in 2021.
No one on the cliff diving circuit has done more to raise the standards of the sport, or to increase its public profile. “Gary put the asphalt on the gravel for the rest of us,” one of his current rivals, Cătălin-Petru Preda, told me. But Hunt remains strikingly uninterested in the financial opportunities or professional trappings that typically come with such sporting success. He doesn’t have a coach, an agent or any interest in feeding the social media machine. His fierce competitive desire appears unconnected to his ego. He gives his winner’s trophies to his mother or puts on his carpentry belt and turns them into something useful, like an ashtray or pot-plant holder. (“Trophies disguised as objects,” he calls them.)
Hunt is now 38 but has retained, as L’Equipe newspaper put it, the look of an “eternal teen”. He’s lean as a snake, with unbrushed blond hair, and dresses like he woke up late and grabbed whatever was at the top of the pile. Even those who know him best describe him as an enigma, a daredevil who like to spend his free time gardening. He trains with the intensity of a modern professional athlete, diving every weekday and spending hours in the gym, and relaxes like a sportsman of a bygone era, enjoying roll-up cigarettes in the evening and several drinks too many after a win. By his own admission he is spectacularly absentminded and spectacularly unbothered by the consequences. “Falling asleep on trains, missing planes, nothing phases him,” said his sister Jeannette, whose wedding he came within a whisker of missing.
Gary Hunt at the Red Bull cliff diving world series at the Blue Lagoon in Abereiddy, west Wales. Photograph: PA Images/Alamy
In September last year, I travelled to Polignano a Mare to watch Hunt compete in the penultimate event of the 2022 cliff diving world series. It’s a beautiful setting, with the old town built on the cliffs overlooking the Adriatic Sea on one side, and a cove on the other. Wandering through the narrow streets the evening before competition began, wearing my media accreditation badge, I was stopped by a man who mistook me for a member of the Red Bull organising committee. He was an amateur high diver from Freiburg, Germany, one of tens of thousands of spectators who would watch the competition from the beach, rocks, balconies or boats that weekend. When I told him I was there to write about Hunt, his jaw dropped. It was as if I’d told a football fan I was interviewing Lionel Messi.
The event in Polignano was crucial to Hunt’s season. He desperately needed to win here if he was going to stay in the race for a 10th series title, and his fourth in a row. He lay third in the overall rankings, with just this and one more event to go. On Friday morning, the day the competition began, I went to meet Hunt for breakfast at his hotel. When I arrived, he was midway through a plate of eggs, bacon and tomato, which he would wash down with two coffees, a croissant and a bowl of granola. “I don’t have to be fussy with what I eat,” he said, laughing. “I only have 27 seconds of work this weekend.”
That was true: five practice dives and four competitive ones, of three seconds each. But they would take their toll. For high divers, injuries are a constant risk. Two of the divers meant to be competing in Polignano had withdrawn: one with a punctured lung after landing on his chest at the previous event, the other with a fractured cheekbone and two black eyes from a botched dive earlier in the week. Even if a dive goes to plan, pain is a certainty. “The impact of hitting the water is always violent,” Hunt said. “The force spreads through your feet into your legs. If you have not protected your balls, it’s like someone has taken a razor blade to them. Or it can be your bum, which you really have to squeeze.”
He was laughing again. The rest of the hotel dining room was silent, with a few other divers lost in thought, trying to get focused. Hunt was not ready for that yet, and when the time came, he had his own way of preparing. Instead of putting on noise-cancelling headphones and listening to music, he would juggle, keeping five balls in the air at a time. The idea is to slow his mind by doing something instinctive, he explained, like when he plays a familiar piece on the piano, one of his other hobbies. “You’re not really thinking what you are doing. It can almost feel like your brain is not controlling your hands.”
Gary Hunt juggling prior to competing. Photograph: Dean Treml / Red Bull Content Pool
The juggling might seem like an ostentatious show of bravado, an attempt to psych out his rivals. But the more time I spent with Hunt, the more obvious it became that this was authentic. He is so casual that I sometimes found myself wanting to remind him the competition is starting soon and he really needs to get ready. He does not seem like other elite athletes, because he doesn’t really think of himself that way. As we were finishing our chat, a middle-aged couple walking by stopped and stared at Hunt. He blushed. Even after all these years of success, it still seems to surprise him that people know who he is.
Like many tales of human flight, this one started with an envious glance upwards. Hunt was nine and in a pool in Leeds, in the north of England. As he’d done with ballet and tap and modern dancing, he’d followed his two older sisters into competitive swimming. But Hunt was not a strong swimmer, and was bored doing lengths. Out of the corner of his eye he saw some other children jumping off a platform into the water, chatting and laughing as they waited to dive again. That looked more fun.
Hunt begged his parents to let him try. He quickly progressed from the 1-metre to the 3-metre and 10-metre platforms, and within a couple of years he was travelling the country for competitions, and training five times a week. “Gary was a very quiet boy,” Adrian Hinchliffe, his coach in Leeds, told me. “He was not the best diver we had, but he loved the sport and could do an amazing handstand, and would always win the contest to see who could hold it the longest. He was very competitive.”
For the early morning sessions, his mother, Pamela, would drive him to the pool at 5am and doze in a sleeping bag in the car while he dived. The two of them were close. It was different with his father. Peter Hunt was a shy, anxious man who worked in middle management for British Telecom. He spent all his free time working, sitting at the dining room table in front of a huge pile of paper, a cigarette in his mouth. To Hunt, it seemed like his father never really wanted children, especially not a boy. He never seemed particularly interested in his son, or offered him praise. To this day, Hunt thinks that part of his dedication to being the best comes from a desire to make his father proud.
When Hunt was 16, his parents separated, and his mother moved to Southampton with the children, where he continued to dive. A few years later, Hunt was joined there by his best friend, Gavin Brown. Brown was from Bradford, close to Leeds, and the boys had trained together for several years when they were younger. Though Hunt was a very good diver, Brown was better, winning a bronze medal at the junior world championships. Popular and outgoing, he lived by his motto, “go hard or go hard home”.
Gary Hunt doing gymnastics as a young child. Photograph: Courtesy of Gary Hunt
They both enrolled at Solent University, but diving remained their focus. With a few other boys in their club, the Southampton Diving Academy, they’d spend hours studying videos of their diving heroes, like the Russian Dmitri Sautin who, after being stabbed numerous times on a Moscow street when he was 17, went on to become the most successful diver in Olympic history. After training sessions finished, the boys would try to emulate Sautin, or bait each other into ever crazier dives. Tom Owens, who was part of the group, and is now head coach at City of Sheffield Diving Club, told me that Hunt was the only one who needed no encouragement to do something outrageous. He’d climb trees until the branches cracked, and worm through narrow sewer pipes by the light of his mobile phone. Like many people I spoke to, Owens noted Hunt’s odd mixture of personal qualities. “He had this in-built drive to challenge himself,” said Owens, but at the same time, he was “laid-back to the point of horizontal”.
One year, a team of divers from their club were invited to a competition in Egypt. On the morning of their flight, Hunt was about to leave the house when he realised he’d forgotten his passport. “He ran upstairs and then came down slowly,” Hunt’s mother, Pamela, recalled recently. “His passport had run out.” She had to drive him to London to renew it, and then help find him another flight. Hunt then left his wallet on the plane and had his phone stolen while sightseeing in Cairo. The story has become legend among Hunt’s family and friends. But when I asked him about it, he’d forgotten most of the mishaps. He did recall that he got bumped up to first class on the flight to Cairo. Great trip!
In 2006, Hunt qualified for the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne in the synchronised 10m platform event, diving with Callum Johnstone. Hunt’s father had died the previous year from pancreatic cancer, but his mother, sisters and assorted aunts, uncles and cousins flew to Australia to watch the pair win third place for England.
Though Hunt was still only 21, he could see that younger, more talented divers were coming through. One was 11-year-old Tom Daley, who’d beaten Hunt in a competition and would go on to represent Great Britain at four Olympic Games.
If Hunt wanted to be the best at something, there was only one way to go. Up.
Hunt’s first trip into high altitude came later that year, when he was still at university. Back then, and to a lesser extent today, the amusement park circuit was a common source of employment for cliff divers, allowing them to improve their skills while earning money. Hunt’s diving coach in Southampton had been asked if he knew anyone who could fill in for a pirate show in Lido di Jesolo, a resort town near Venice, Italy. He recommended Hunt, who readily accepted.
Besides performing in sword fights, Hunt’s role was to leap into a tiny pool from 18 metres. This was the first time he’d be diving from above 10 metres. The ladder was narrow and the platform barely had space for his feet. Hunt feared that he might miss the pool when he jumped. But he quickly got the hang of it, and then started trying more complicated dives. “You know how you can drop a cat and it always lands on its legs?” said Steve Black, who was also working at the park. “Well, Gary was like a cat. He would do these crazy tricks and the crowd loved it.”
Hunt’s friend Gavin Brown also tried high diving that summer, at a different amusement park. When the pair returned to the house they shared in Southampton, they watched videos of cliff diving competitions and talked about how they might push the boundaries of the sport one day. Perhaps they could perform more twists and somersaults than the current divers dared, or as Brown suggested, take off using a running jump. And why not take those risks? They were 22, talented and ambitious, their whole lives ahead of them.
Brown, more extroverted than Hunt, would sometimes go out partying by himself and then phone his friend to ask for a lift home. In the early hours of 28 April 2007, on a night out, Brown rang but Hunt missed his call. Later that morning, Hunt’s phone rang again, and when he answered he learned that Brown had been knocked over in a hit-and-run accident and was undergoing emergency surgery. He died later that day. (The driver of the car, a farm worker without a licence or insurance, dumped the vehicle and fled to his native Poland. He was arrested two years later, extradited to the UK, and sentenced to five years in jail.)
Hunt with his best friend, Gavin Brown, c 2006. Photograph: Courtesy of Gary Hunt
In the months that followed, Hunt lost control. “I was just in disbelief that Gavin had died,” he told me. “I started to imagine that he was not dead and that I had to accomplish some mission to be reunited with him.” A voice in his head told him to walk from Southampton to Bath, 50 miles away. He got lost and at nightfall he sheltered in a barn, where he was found by the police, who’d been alerted by reports of a man on the highway.
Trying to forget, Hunt smoked weed and took party drugs, but he couldn’t shake the despair. Invited to a stag-do in Brighton later in the year, he ended up alone on the beach in tears, screaming at the sea. A year after Brown’s death, in 2008, Hunt travelled to Rome to compete in the 10m platform event for Great Britain, but when he was meant to be diving he was found walking in the street reading Shakespeare’s The Tempest. “He was not making any sense when he talked,” said Adrian Hinchliffe, who was GB coach at the time. “I called Gary’s mother and told her I was bringing him home right away.”
When Hunt made his Red Bull debut in 2009, his mental state had improved, though his grief was still raw. On tour, he deliberately kept people at a distance. “I never really wanted to make a good friend again. I kind of accepted I was going to be alone,” he told me. His grief was also a kind of fuel. “All the things we’d talked about doing in high diving, he couldn’t do now, so I said to myself, I’m going to do it,” Hunt recalled. “I felt like it was on me to accomplish all the dreams that we’d had together.” Even today, there’s a sense among Hunt’s friends that Brown’s death still motivates him. “Gavin’s death is a massive part of Gary’s story, and it’s never left him,” Hinchliffe said.
Between competitions, that first year, Hunt worked at the Walygator amusement park near Metz, in the north of France. His role in the show was playing a high-diving character who believed he was Tarzan. “Jane” was played by a French actor named Sabine Ravinet, who also ran theatre workshops in prisons and for children from troubled homes. She was more than two decades older than Hunt. She spoke little English – and he little French – but with miming and patience they got to know each other. “My first impression was that he was not like the others,” Ravinet recalled recently. “In his way of listening to you, of being completely present with you, his gentleness, and also a certain mystery in his personality.”
They moved in together in Paris in 2010, while continuing to work at Walygator each summer for three more years, even as Hunt flew to distant locations – from Easter Island to Mexico – on the cliff diving tour. He grew to love the amusement park life. Besides divers, there were clowns, dancers and puppeteers from across the world. After each day’s show, they’d meet up at one of their bungalows, have a barbecue and beers, and teach each other new skills. That’s how Hunt learned to juggle. He was also healing. “I realised that the fact that Gavin was no longer there had given me the freedom to move to France, and to live this life,” he told me.
In 2013, having won the three previous Red Bull series, Hunt was pipped to the title at the last event of the season in Thailand. He decided that if he wanted to get back to the top he needed to give up amusement park work and dedicate himself to competitive diving. That year, high diving was included for the first time in the World Aquatics Championships in Barcelona, and Hunt was part of a large GB squad. But because high diving is not an Olympic sport, he did not even receive any kit from British Swimming. He arrived at the competition wearing a plain white T-shirt on which he’d written “GBR”, and left with a silver medal, one of only two medals won by the team. In the 2015 and 2019 championships, he won gold.
Jade Gillet and Gary Hunt in the mixed 10m synchronised final at the Fina world championships in Budapest, Hungary, in 2022. Photograph: Reuters/Alamy
By then, Brexit was looming and Hunt’s freedom to live and work in France was no longer guaranteed. He could, however, apply for citizenship, given the time he’d lived there and his cultural integration. He spoke fluent French and had even stopped reading in English, preferring to work through the French classics, like Alexandre Dumas’s The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo.
In early 2020, after receiving French citizenship, Hunt announced his intention to compete for France both in high-diving contests and in the pool at the 2024 Olympics, to be held in Paris. For all his success, he had never been able to let go of his childhood dream of competing at the Olympics. The French diving team was delighted to have him as a high diver, but 10m platform diving was another matter. It is a sport that favours younger athletes, and besides, Hunt had not dived head-first in competition for more than a decade.
Initially, his quest seemed doomed. Then, in late 2021, Clémence Monnery was appointed head trainer. Having watched Hunt train, she decided she wanted him to be on the Olympic team. “Gary is à part,” she told me. There aren’t many like him. “For a lot of divers, fear is a problem at 10 metres. But the king of 27 metres is not scared!” And when he nailed a new dive once in training, she said, he didn’t have to repeat it again and again to have the confidence to do it in competition.
Even so, the Olympics remains a long shot. Hunt’s friends and rivals are astonished that he is even trying to get there. “It’s a crazy move!” Orlando Duque, the 2009 series winner, who is now the sports director of Red Bull Cliff Diving, told me. “For Gary to make the Olympics at 40 will be a huge achievement,” said Hunt’s boyhood coach Hinchcliffe, who now works with the Australian diving team. “It’s inspirational just to try.”
At Polignano a Mare last autumn, to reach the diving platform, competitors had to walk from their hotels through the old town, get the nod of approval from a security guard, and enter a cliffside apartment. On the apartment’s balcony, two platforms extended out over the sparkling waters in the cove. The lower platform, 21 metres above the sea, was for the women, who joined the tour in 2014. The men’s platform, reached by a ladder on the balcony, was six metres higher. Twenty-seven metres is the maximum height for men’s competitive diving: above that the diver’s rapid acceleration makes it almost impossible to perform additional somersaults while greatly increasing the injury risk.
It was 12.30pm and the athletes were preparing for the practice dives on the terrace, stretching and doing somersaults on to mats. When it was time to dive, most of the divers went through the same routine: peering over the edge of the platform to attract the attention of one of the four safety divers treading water in the landing zone below, before throwing to them a pair of flip-flops, which the divers would need to cross the pebble beach, cobble stones and narrow streets when returning to the cliffside apartment. Then they motioned to the safety divers to slap the water, which would help them distinguish the blue of the sea from the sky as they flew, and judge where the water surface was.
Nikita Fedotov and Gary Hunt hug on the first day of competition at Polignano a Mare. Photograph: Romina Amato/Red Bull
Just watching the divers walk along the platform made my heart pound. Some made the sign of the cross on their chest, or slapped their thighs to psych themselves up. Every now and then a diver would step back from the edge just before they were supposed to jump, disturbed by a gust of wind or a moment of apprehension. Blake Aldridge, who partnered Tom Daley at the 2008 Olympics, described to me his fear when he made his debut in a Red Bull event in France in 2011. It was blowing a gale and freezing, conditions pool divers never have to deal with. “I looked over the edge and then I walked straight back off the platform. I couldn’t do it.” Eventually, he tried a simple dive, with one somersault, but the force of the impact shocked him. He was too scared to do twists, until Hunt, a childhood friend, offered to dive off the platform alongside him. This act of kindness gave Aldridge the courage to try. He became hooked on cliff diving – the experience of flying makes you feel, for just those three seconds, “unbreakable, like Superman or He-Man”, he said – and had a successful career, even if the element of fear never truly went away. When he started, he had assumed that, as an Olympic athlete, cliff diving would come easily to him and he would dominate. He soon realised he was wrong. “It’s a different sport [to pool diving], and Gary is the best by a mile, a unique talent and human.”
On the platform at Polignano, Hunt was casual, not even bothering to bring flip-flops, for he planned to take a shortcut back up. He sat down on edge, swinging his dangling ankles for a while, before standing up and jumping into the void. On surfacing, he waved away the jetski that takes the divers back to shore, and swam to the cliff. After several failed attempts, he managed to leap up with one hand to grab hold of a small ledge, and proceeded to scale the cliff, like a climber, reaching the platform five minutes before the start of the competition. I asked one of the Red Bull staff if this was normal behaviour. “For Gary it’s normal,” he replied.
Prizes on the Red Bull circuit are modest compared with many sports. In 2013, when Hunt left the amusement park to focus on competitive diving, the male and female winners of each of the eight competitions in the series received about €5,000, with a €12,000 bonus for the series champion. (Today, event winners get €7,085 and the overall winner €16,000.) But with his travel expenses covered by the tour, and him winning so often, Hunt was earning enough to live on. He continues to support himself mainly through competition winnings, and a small housing allowance that he receives from the French Swimming Federation.
As the dominant athlete in a spectacular sport, Hunt could earn significantly more through endorsements and sponsorships. Early on in his career he signed a small deal with a construction firm but found the requirement to always wear a cap with its logo too stressful. Today, his only sponsorship, worth a few thousand pounds a year, is with the Australian swimwear company Budgy Smuggler, to wear its briefs in competition.
In Polignano, I asked Hunt why, given how many of the Red Bull series he had won, he wasn’t on the company’s books, like some other divers on the tour, including his young challenger, Aidan Heslop, from Britain, and the leading female diver, the Australian Rhiannan Iffland. He said he had once applied, but never heard back. Such a slight might have made some people bitter, but not Hunt, for whom the term even-tempered is too mild. (His partner, Ravinet, said that in the 12 years they’ve been together, she’s never seen him angry.) “I guess I don’t really fit the mould [for Red Bull]. I don’t self-promote, and I’m not a fan of other extreme sports. I play the piano!” Hunt told me. “But I’m very happy. I’m pretty sure I will have no regrets when I’m older about not trying to make more money.”
After the first two round of diving on the Friday, Hunt was in second position and, crucially, ahead of his main rivals for the series title. Up to this point, the degree of difficulty had been capped, so divers weren’t allowed to do their hardest routines. But for the remaining two dives, there was no limit. The sport has developed since Hunt’s early days on tour, and he no longer had a repertoire of the most difficult dives, putting him at a disadvantage at this stage. If divers with harder routines executed them well, it would be tough for him to match their scores. Two of them had done that consistently during the season. Heslop was second overall coming into Polignano. Just 20, he’d grown up watching cliff diving on YouTube, idolising Hunt. He was part of a new generation of divers going directly from pool diving to cliff diving, now that a professional career in the sport was possible. Ahead of Heslop was the series leader, Cătălin-Petru Preda, a thoughtful Romanian, who saw Hunt, a good friend of his, as the biggest threat for the title.
On the second day of competition, the wind picked up, tossing around the yoga mats at the foot of the dive platform. For his third dive, Hunt had chosen the famous triple quad that he’d pioneered in 2009. He skipped along the platform to the edge, acknowledged the crowd, and then turned his back to them, facing inwards. After taking a single breath and the tiniest hop, he bent his knees and whipped up his arms as if they were wings, rotating them behind him. Launching into the air, upwards and outwards, he corkscrewed his body while flipping until he was upside down, left arm wrapped around his head and right arm around his chest. Three more twists, two more somersaults, before righting himself and entering the water with barely a splash. With one round to go, Hunt was in the lead.
By lunchtime the next day, Sunday, the town was heaving. People queued for an hour or more to get a slice of focaccia before the competition started. The beach was so packed that security guards prevented anyone else coming in. Music pounded from giant speakers.
The women dived first, with Iffland winning the competition and securing the overall series win, her sixth. Then the men went, in reverse order. With just Hunt left to dive, Heslop had moved into first place, and Preda was a close second. Hunt skipped to the edge of the platform, waved to the crowd and then did a little dance, his hands switching between his knees, and dived. When he surfaced, he high-fived a cameraman in the water.
For what seemed an age, all the other divers and the spectators stared at the giant screen on the beach, waiting for the judges, who were observing from a boat, to hold up their scores. And then, finally, a roar. “Gary Hunt, the legend once again!” the announcer yelled. With an average score of 8.5, Hunt had overtaken Heslop, and also moved into a narrow overall series lead. After spraying champagne for the television cameras and crowd, Hunt stayed on the beach long after all the other divers had left, posing for photos with fans.
From left: Aidan Heslop, Gary Hunt and Cătălin-Petru Preda celebrate on the podium at the Red Bull cliff diving world series at Polignano a Mare, Italy, on 18 September 2022. Photograph: Romina Amato/Red Bull
That evening we went for dinner with some of his closest friends on tour: Artem Silchenko and Nikita Fedotov, both from Russia but competing as independent athletes, and Oleksiy Prygorov, of Ukraine. Hunt can converse in Russian – he learned it specifically to be able to talk to the Russian-speakers on the circuit – and has visited the country many times, often to hang out with Silchenko. The men drank wine, smoked and told jokes and held a contest to see who could make the best dolphin noise. Hunt won his second competition of the day. Mostly though, he was quiet, content. Later the group joined the afterparty in the town’s main square. When I left Hunt, just before midnight, his cap was sideways on his head and his footwork shaky. When he woke up in the morning he had no recollection of how he got back to his hotel.
Four weeks later, Hunt managed to arrive on time at Sydney harbour for the last event of the series. He needed another victory if he was to be sure of his fourth series win in a row, and his 10th overall, a feat that may never be repeated. Again, it came down to the final dive. Heslop, in second place in the competition, and overall, could hardly bear to look as Hunt stood on the edge of the platform. When Hunt hit the water, Heslop sunk to his knees, his head in his hands, knowing that, yet again, the king had done enough. Emerging from the water with a huge grin, Hunt hopped over a security barrier and hugged Ravinet. When I texted to congratulate him, he seemed more excited by the prospect of his upcoming week’s holiday in Australia than by his latest title.
“Whoohoo,” he wrote, “je suis en vacances!!!”
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( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )
SRINAGAR: As the Jammu and Kashmir Public Service Commission (JKPSC) declared the final results of the Jammu and Kashmir Administrative Service (JKAS), the hearts of three siblings were in their mouths.
Ifra Anjum , Huma Anjum and their brother Suhail Wani created history by cracking JKAS 2022 together. They are wards of an erstwhile Baglihar project mechanic from Doda
Soon unprecedented happened. The silence was broken by tears of joy as all three qualified for the most coveted examination to make them part of the Jammu and Kashmir administrative set-up. It has happened for the first time in the history of now JKAS competitive examination that three siblings have qualified for this examination in the same year.
Interestingly the two sisters and their brother are from a far-off Doda village. They are settled in Jammu. The siblings include Ifra Anjum Wani, Huma Anjum Wani and their younger brother Suhail Ahmad Wani. They had painstakingly prepared together without any formal coaching.
“It was the first attempt for Ifra and Suhail, but elder sister Huma qualified it in her second attempt. The siblings had their formal high schooling in Doda in a private school. Later they shifted to Jammu for higher studies” said their jovial father.
According to him, one of his daughters Ifra did her master’s in physics, however, the other two siblings; Huma and Suhail have been pursuing their master’s degree in political science.
The preparation for the examination started together as all of them aimed at the same goal and achieved it together.
According to their father, the siblings started preparation in 2021 and have been studying meticulously and complementing each other since then without formal coaching.
“We were inspired by our father. His words and support and belief in us helped us achieve our goal,” Irfa said. “It is a good way to do social service, however, if one want power and money we could have chosen other fields.” She said they have had to face lot of financial difficulties but they were never let down by parents.
Ifra said she and Suhail passed it in the first attempt, the credit goes to their elder sister because they located the mistakes that prevented her quality the examination in the first attempt. Interestingly, they did not stop after their sister failed to crack it n 2021, they quickly grouped and started studying together.
At a time when technology is taking over every aspect of human lives especially education, the siblings claims are unbelievable even for laggards.
“We do not have a phone and social media presence. We used our mother’s phone to connect virtually and download any essential reading material,” said Ifra.
“It is a journey which started much early in their life. They were clear about a goal,” father Wani said who was working as mechanic in Baglihar project and now a private contractor.
“Lockdown broke my back but I did not let it deter my children’s education. I still don’t own a bicycle. My children have always made me proud by being obedient and never yielded to ostentatious norms of society,” Wani said as he also credits their mother also for silent contribution.
Suhail who is younger to sisters has secured 111th rank and obtained 1055 points followed by Huma Anjum Wani having 117th rank with 1050.5 points and Ifra Anjum Wani having 143rd rank with 1034.5 points.