Tag: travels

  • Indian Man Travels To Pakistan To Marry Love Of His Life – Kashmir News

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    Islamabad, May 2: Despite hostilities between the two countries, an Indian national travelled to Pakistan and married a woman in Sukkur, the media reported.

    Mahendar Kumar, a resident of Mumbai, came to Sukkur along with his family to get married to Sanjugata Kumari, reports Geo News.

    The wedding took place at a local hall in Sukkur, which was attended by the couple’s relatives and people from the Hindu community.

    Kumari along with her husband will leave for India in a few days after completion of legal formalities.

    The parents of the bride said that the couple became friends on social media and decided to get married.

    Later, the families contacted each other via WhatsApp and finalised the wedding ceremony, Geo News reported.

    Aishwar Lal Makeja, of the Mukhi Hindu Panjaat Sukkur, who attended the wedding function, said love has no borders and wished the couple a happy life.–(IANS)

    Pakistani Girl Falls in Love With Uttar Pradesh Boy While Playing Ludo Game, Crosses Border To Meet Him


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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • I didn’t plan to retrace my mother’s travels. But my footsteps followed hers around the world

    I didn’t plan to retrace my mother’s travels. But my footsteps followed hers around the world

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    When I told my mum I was taking my younger sister to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, she could barely contain her excitement.

    Thirty years before we set foot in Goma, our mother arrived in the same city on a dusty Bedford truck that had carted a swag of lanky youths all the way from London. Back then, the DRC was called Zaire and civil war had yet to tear the region apart. Mum remembers Goma as being quite cosmopolitan.

    A mountain gorilla in a national park.
    A mountain gorilla in Virunga national park, north of Goma, the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Photograph: Petrina Darrah

    When my sister and I passed through, there were “no firearms” signs tacked to ATM booths. Virunga national park rangers stuck with us at all times. We weren’t allowed to walk alone. My sister had never travelled outside New Zealand or Europe.

    It might seem reckless, visiting a country considered so risky for foreigners. Most travel insurance policies refuse to cover it. But we were dogged in our pursuit of reaching the peak of the Nyiragongo volcano our mother had climbed decades earlier.

    A selection of faded photos showing a young woman in her travels around the world.
    Selections from the photo album of Darrah’s mother’s travels – the middle-right image shows her standing on top of Nyiragongo volcano. Photograph: Petrina Darrah

    I didn’t always plan to retrace my mother’s travels around the world. Yet some quirk of nature or nurture has landed me in many of the same places she journeyed through, back before she was anyone’s mother.

    Shrugging in the face of convention, Mum spent the late 70s and early 80s pursuing a series of adventures that became steadily more outlandish. At 20, she worked in Greece as a groom in a stable of Arabian stallions. She lived on a kibbutz in Israel. There she met a man and travelled with him to the United States.

    They hitchhiked from a ranch in Wyoming to California, catching rides with young men who had driven three states away from home for the hell of it. They slept under bridges and on beaches and, camped alongside Vietnam vets who were trying to outrun themselves. She drew the line at jumping on to trains.

    Eventually, Mum hitchhiked all the way down to the Pacific coast of Mexico. Later, she backpacked solo through Indonesia, guided by a well-thumbed 1982 copy of Lonely Planet Southeast Asia on a Shoestring, which still sits on her bookshelf. She went to New Zealand to hike. She ended up getting married instead.

    Mum travelled because of the stories told by her Jamaican born and raised father. She grew up in rural England listening to his memories of custard apples and alligators on a hot and humid island far away.

    Two young women in hiking gear sitting on the ground in a national park.
    Petrina Darrah and her sister at Virunga national park. Photograph: Petrina Darrah

    Similarly, when I was young, I pored over sepia-toned photographs of my mother as a young woman, with a feathery haircut and skimpy shorts, feeding an okapi, standing on top of Kilimanjaro, posing on a volcano.

    These stories planted the seed: I wanted to see beyond New Zealand’s small horizons. As soon as I was old enough, I shot off overseas on a one-way ticket. While my peers found jobs, saved for houses and settled into long-term relationships, I emptied my bank account over and over, going wherever I could find a cheap flight, a temporary job, or a new adventure.

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    A selection of faded travel photos, including an orange Bedford truck on a road.
    From the travel photo album of Darrah’s mother, including images of the Bedford truck that transported her from London to Goma. Photograph: Petrina Darrah

    Comparing notes with Mum, somewhere along the line I realised my travels echoed hers. It might have been sheer chance, or perhaps an unconscious direction set by her stories. Or maybe it just goes to show the backpacker routes carved out by travel guidebooks have stood the test of time. Whatever it was, I have trodden some of the same paths unintentionally as well as on purpose.

    I moved to Tanzania for a job and stood at the foot of Kilimanjaro. I crossed the Serengeti in a dusty safari Jeep.

    A 1982 copy of Lonely Planet’s Southeast Asia on a Shoestring.
    Darrah’s mother’s 1982 copy of Lonely Planet’s Southeast Asia on a Shoestring. Photograph: Petrina Darrah

    I made it to Indonesia and sent her a photo of myself, lying among a dozen other bodies prone with sea sickness, on a boat from Lombok to Flores. She flipped through her album and sent back a photo of travellers puddled on a deck, suffering the same affliction on the same route. I washed up on the Pacific coast of Mexico, with a laptop instead of a tent. The small towns along this coast have Starlink now.

    Many things have changed since she travelled. I don’t send letters home – I share my location on Instagram and hundreds of people, not just my immediate family, know where I am. Instead of precious rolls of film carefully meted out on special moments, I take endless smartphone photos that will probably never be printed. Hippies have been replaced by digital nomads.

    But the lure of travel is as compelling as ever. Where does it end? Her restlessness ran out – mine is still burning. Maybe I’ll stick out my thumb in a foreign country and end up meeting the man I’ll marry, like she did. In the meantime, I’ll keep collecting stories to pass on.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Sara Ali Khan travels by metro in Mumbai, shares video

    Sara Ali Khan travels by metro in Mumbai, shares video

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    Mumbai: Actress Sara Ali Khan recently took a Metro ride in Mumbai.
    Taking to Instagram Story, Sara dropped a video, which shows her seated in the Metro.

    Dressed in a white kurta and spectacles, Sara waved at the camera while smiling widely.
    “Mumbai meri jaan… Didn’t think I would be in Mumbai metro before you guys,” she captioned the post, tagging her ‘Metro In Dino’ co-star Aditya Roy Kapoor and director Anurag Basu.

    ANI 20230427004028

    Seems like Sara has started shooting for ‘Metro In Dino’, a film that apparently draws its title from the popular song ‘In Dino’ from ‘Life in a… Metro’.

    MS Education Academy

    The project will showcase bittersweet tales of human relationships based in contemporary times.
    Billed as an anthology, it will also feature Konkona Sen Sharma, Pankaj Tripathi, Fatima Sana Shaikh, Anupam Kher, Ali Fazal and Neena Gupta in the lead roles.

    Sharing more details about the film, Anurag Basu had earlier said, “Metro…In Dino is a tale of the people and for the people! It has been a while since I am working on this one and I am glad to be collaborating with a powerhouse like Bhushan Kumar yet again who has always been like a pillar to me!”

    He added, “The storyline is very fresh and relevant as I look forward to collaborating with amazing artists who bring that essence of contemporary aura with them. As the music plays a very important role in any film, I couldn’t be happier to be collaborating with my dear friend Pritam who has literally added life to the characters and story with his work.”

    More details regarding the project are awaited.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Rishi Sunak travels to Belfast in sign NI protocol deal is imminent

    Rishi Sunak travels to Belfast in sign NI protocol deal is imminent

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    Rishi Sunak arrived in Belfast on Thursday night, in a sign that a deal on the Northern Ireland protocol is imminent.

    The foreign secretary, James Cleverly, will also travel to Brussels on Friday for talks with the European Commission vice-president, Maroš Šefčovič.

    The movements suggest that an announcement of a negotiated solution between the UK and EU could come as early as Friday. Sunak is being accompanied by the Northern Ireland secretary, Chris Heaton-Harris, Downing Street said. Security is already in place at a central Belfast hotel.

    A No 10 spokesperson said: “Whilst talks with the EU are ongoing, ministers continue to engage with relevant stakeholders to ensure any solution fixes the practical problems on the ground, meets our overarching objectives and safeguards Northern Ireland’s place in the UK’s internal market.

    “The prime minister and secretary of state for Northern Ireland are travelling to Northern Ireland this evening to speak to political parties as part of this engagement process.”

    EU Diplomats have reportedly been summoned to a briefing on Friday, with speculation that a draft deal is about to be shared and road tested both in Belfast and Brussels.

    A UK government spokesperson confirmed Cleverly’s meetings in Brussels but played down the prospect of a deal being unveiled on Friday.

    “This is part of their ongoing engagement and constructive dialogue with the EU to find practical solutions that work for the people of Northern Ireland,” they said.

    A deal would conclude four months of negotiations to end a row that has caused fissures in the Tory party for the past three years and led to the suspension of power-sharing in Belfast.

    An agreement has been on the cards for the last four weeks and is expected to include a settlement on an elimination of some checks on goods going from Great Britain to Northern Ireland, and a new dispute resolution mechanism not involving the European court of justice in the first instance.

    Checks and governance were sources of tension in the Conservative party and with the Democratic Unionist party. The government is expected to say its new deal complies with the strict seven tests the DUP set in exchange for its support.

    Earlier this week, Nigel Dodds, a former deputy leader of the DUP, indicated that the DUP would not be supporting any deal that continued regulatory divergence between Northern Ireland and Great Britain, claiming this would continue the “colonisation” of Northern Ireland by the EU.

    A government source said: “The DUP have published in black and white what their seven tests are. We believe this meets them, otherwise we wouldn’t have brought the negotiation team home nearly a week ago.”

    Sunak is meeting all political parties on Friday morning but the focus will be on the DUP, which has insisted it will not return to power-sharing unless its seven conditions for reform of the protocol are met. Few expect the DUP to support the deal unless it eliminates the application of EU law in Northern Ireland, which is one of their seven demands of negotiators.

    A breakthrough has already been made on reducing checks on goods moving from Britain to Northern Ireland, however, with a “green lane” involving no customs declarations being proposed for food and farm produce destined for Northern Irish supermarkets, corner shops, hospitals, schools and prisons and other public settings.

    Negotiators have agreed that products for retail should go through this “green” lane, with discussions continuing on how to deal with wholesalers who supply to independent shops and hospitality.

    Talks have also been continuing on how to deal with “intermediary” goods, including components that may end up in finished products destined for sale in the EU’s single market.

    A new path has been agreed in principle on governance and the role of the European court of justice in dispute resolution, a source of considerable political problems for Sunak with the DUP and hardline Brexiters in the European Research Group of Tory MPs.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Parliamentary Standing Committee travels in Hyderabad Metro

    Parliamentary Standing Committee travels in Hyderabad Metro

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    Hyderabad: A 14-member Parliamentary Standing Committee on Housing and Urban Affairs travelled by the Hyderabad Metro Rail.

    The panel led by Rajiv Ranjan Singh visited Metro Rail facilities and also travelled from Raidurg to Ameerpet stations and back on Saturday night.

    The committee comprising members of Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha has interacted with Hyderabad Metro Rail Limited (HMRL) Managing Director NVS Reddy and MD L&TMRHL, KVB Reddy and appreciated the successful operations of Hyderabad Metro for the past five years.

    N.V.S. Reddy has informed the Committee members that the Hyderabad Metro Rail is the world’s largest Metro Rail project in public private partnership mode and shown several facilities being extended to the commuters.

    The MDs have also shown them the shopping and other convenience stores in Ameerpet station which the members appreciated as useful to the commuters and at the same time generating revenue for the Concessionaire.

    Reddy has also explained the highlights of the new Airport Metro Express project being constructed with 100 percent state government funds. He informed them that the survey and other pre-construction works are going on at a brisk pace and that the project would be grounded soon.

    The other committee members who visited the metro rail facilities included R. Girirajan, Ram Chander Jangra, Kavita Patidar, Benny Behanan, Shankar Lalwani and Hasnain Masoodi.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • J&K’s vlogger travels more than 700 kilometres in two days by just taking lift – The Chenab Times

    J&K’s vlogger travels more than 700 kilometres in two days by just taking lift – The Chenab Times

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    A vlogger from Jammu and Kashmir’s Thathri town in Doda district took a challenge from his subscriber to travel to Dehradun by just taking a lift.

    As per details available with The Chenab Times, Nasir Butt, 21, known as “Crazy Vlogger JK” on YouTube, took the challenge from one of his subscribers to reach Dehradun in Uttrakhand to meet Anurag Dobhal (UK07 Rider), a popular YouTuber from Dehradun. 

    Butt covered more than 700 kilometres of distance in just two days and reached Dehradun, according to videos uploaded by him on his YouTube channel, “Crazy Vlogger JK.”

    Day 2: Video of Crazy Vlogger JK

    Butt, who hails from Chenab valley’s Thathri town in Doda district in Jammu and Kashmir, is making videos of different challenges on YouTube. Despite having less family support, he worked on his videos and is currently travelling across India by just taking a lift.


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