Tag: workers

  • People watching bureaucrats behaving like YSRCP workers: Pawan Kalyan

    People watching bureaucrats behaving like YSRCP workers: Pawan Kalyan

    [ad_1]

    Amaravati: Actor politician Pawan Kalyan on Sunday asked bureaucrats in Andhra Pradesh to take seriously the comments made by former Supreme Court judge Justice Gopal Gowda on the YSR Congress Party’s “unruly governance”.

    The Jana Sena leader tweeted that people are watching the bureaucrats behaving like workers of the ruling party.

    “People at the highest level are very closely watching each and every bureaucrat who’s behaving like a YCP Karyakartha,” he said.

    “Karma is the universal law of cause and effect. You reap what you sow. Hope every bureaucrat who’s blindly supporting the YCP would understand the concept called karma,” wrote Pawan Kalyan.

    He also shared a video of Justice Gopal Gowda’s comments about violation of rule of law in the state.

    Referring to the land pooling for Amaravati, the retired Supreme Court judge stated that there was breach of contract entered with the farmers of Amaravati for development of the state capitall.

    Justice Gowsa had also stated that there was denial of fundamental rights in the case of Amaravati farmers protesting against the move to shift the capital. As many as 307 cases were foisted against farmers in an arbitrary exercise of power. He also mentioned brazen loot of natural resources and the curbs on activities of opposition parties.

    Meanwhile, Pawan Kalyan has greeted former Supreme Court judge Justice S. Abdul Nazeer on his appointment as the new Governor of the state.

    The Jana Sena leader noted that Justice Nazeer delivered several crucial judgments as a Supreme Court judge and brought honour to the position of judge by delivering unbiased judgments with the principles of framework of the Constitution.

    “I hope that Justice Abdul Nazeer who had observed the present Indian society from the position of justice may be well aware of the situations prevailing in Andhra Pradesh. I wish he would instil the Constitution’s spirit in the State with his vast experience as a judicial expert,” Pawan Kalyan said in a statement.

    [ad_2]
    #People #watching #bureaucrats #behaving #YSRCP #workers #Pawan #Kalyan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Life has sprinkled magic on me’: Venice entices remote workers to reverse exodus of youth

    ‘Life has sprinkled magic on me’: Venice entices remote workers to reverse exodus of youth

    [ad_1]

    On most mornings, Mylène Ebrard hops on a waterbus from her home in Giudecca, a neighbourhood of Venice with a village-like feel, and across the canal to her favourite bar, where over a hot chocolate she works from her mobile phone. The ritual has become sacred to the rhythm of her day in Venice, where the French communications specialist has lived since October as part of a project aimed at attracting remote workers to help repopulate the lagoon city.

    “I was just working on social media for one of my clients. They don’t see the difference if I’m here or in Paris,” said Ebrard, 38. “I love this bar during the day as you get the sun on the terrace. It’s impossible to say it’s ugly in Venice, even when it’s raining.”

    In a trend that is showing little sign of abating, the population on Venice’s main island dipped below 50,000 for the first time last summer. Myriad issues have driven more than 120,000 away since the 1950s, although the overriding reason has been the city’s heavy focus on mass tourism, with thousands of visitors crowding its squares, bridges and narrow walkways each day.

    Keen to help reverse the decline, a team at Venice’s Ca’ Foscari University and the Fondazione di Venezia, a cultural heritage group, created Venywhere, a project aimed at enticing those who can work from anywhere to move to the city.

    Mylène Ebrard stands on a sunny canalside
    Mylène Ebrard says she likes to soak up the art and culture. Photograph: Angela Giuffrida/The Observer

    “There has been a strong population decline, but the other aspect is the age of those left – there is a big gap in the 25 to 35-year-old demographic,” said Massimo Warglien, a professor at Ca’ Foscari. “The objective is to attract new, qualified citizens to help change the demographic dynamic and skills of the city while at the same time imagining Venice as a laboratory to explore new ways of working.”

    Ebrard didn’t need much persuading. Browsing her phone last June, she came across a story about the initiative in a French newspaper. Dealing with a break-up with her husband and sensing the time away could be beneficial, she swiftly applied.

    “My grandmother was Italian and it was my dream to move to Italy,” she said. “I started to learn Italian during the coronavirus pandemic and then thought ‘I have nothing and nobody stopping me, so why not’?”

    The application process is hardly onerous: you simply need to prove you can work remotely and be willing to live in Venice for at least three months. In return for a small one-off fee, the project team provides services such as assistance with finding an apartment and dealing with visa requirements as well as organising events to help the newcomers integrate.

    The scheme attracted hundreds of applicants and since it began last March, it has welcomed dozens of digital nomads, including a group of 16 employees from the technology company Cisco, which is collaborating with Venywhere in its study of hybrid working.

    Ebrard is among the 35 from all over the world currently living in Venice and will be there until June. She rents an apartment with a view over the Giudecca canal and has made friends with her Venetian neighbours. “I feel safe here, I can walk everywhere, I can soak up the art and culture, and the people have been very kind,” Ebrard said. “I have more time for people, more time for me and more time to figure out what I want in the future. It is as if life has sprinkled some magic on me.”

    Alan Bruton, an American professor of architecture, has been teaching online since moving to the city in the autumn and has had such a good experience that he decided to stay and focus full-time on his new venture: designing a board game inspired by Venice.

    “I aim to produce and become a productive member of the city,” said the 59-year-old, who has an Irish passport that enables him to stay in Europe. “It’s the perfect place for me to be located.”

    Jonathan Wehlte, a software engineer from Germany, has also decided to stay longer-term. “Venice is very different from any other city I have lived in,” said Wehlte, 35. “There are no cars, you can walk everywhere… and there is so much beauty it inspires you to get out of your habitual thoughts. You start to get new ideas, and think about how society could be in the future.”

    skip past newsletter promotion

    Venice has experienced other mass exoduses over its history, such as after the fall of its powerful maritime republic which impoverished the city economically.

    Tourists crowd the Rialto Bridge, overlooking the Grand Canal
    Tourists crowd the Rialto Bridge – a downside for digital nomads. Photograph: Jumping Rocks/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

    “Before the fall of the Republic in 1797 the population was around 150,000 and in 1838 it was almost 40% less,” said Warglien. “It took decades to get back to the original population size and most of the recovery was due to a positive migratory balance.”

    Venice has been creative in attracting new inhabitants in the past, he added. “During the Republic there were two levels of citizenship – for Venetians and non-Venetians, who were typically merchants. We need to think about different forms of citizenship.”

    Much as they can’t dispute the uniqueness of the city, newcomers acknowledge the challenges experienced by Venetians, such as the struggle to find affordable housing or jobs that are not related to tourism. One specific downside for the digital nomads is the scarcity of co-working space.

    Of course, there is the issue of living among hordes of visitors. “The true challenge is not imagining that mass tourism will magically finish – that would be difficult – but creating an alternative,” said Warglien. “We need to create a model that maintains a normal urban life and is not only dependent on tourism.”

    [ad_2]
    #Life #sprinkled #magic #Venice #entices #remote #workers #reverse #exodus #youth
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Adani row: Water cannon used against protesting AAP workers in Chandigarh

    Adani row: Water cannon used against protesting AAP workers in Chandigarh

    [ad_1]

    Chandigarh: The Chandigarh Police on Sunday used water cannon to prevent AAP workers from moving towards the BJP office here as part of their protest against the Centre over the Adani issue.

    Aam Aadmi Party workers, gathered from various parts of Punjab, wanted to “gherao” the office of the Punjab BJP in Sector 37 here to register their protest against the party-led central government.

    Barricades were put up and a heavy deployment of police was made to prevent the protesters from heading towards the Punjab BJP office.

    Police used a water cannon when AAP workers tried to force their way towards the BJP office, said officials.

    Carrying party flags, AAP workers shouted slogans against the BJP government over the Adani issue.

    AAP MLA from the Jalalabad constituency Jagdeep Kamboj slammed the BJP alleging that it has failed on all fronts.

    Later, police detained several party leaders and workers.

    Earlier speaking to reporters at the party office, AAP leader Harchand Singh Barsat alleged that the Adani Group’s fortunes rose under the BJP rule.

    Another AAP leader, Sunny Ahluwalia, said the party will continue to raise its voice over this issue.

    Adani Group stocks had taken a beating on the bourses after US-based activist short-seller Hindenburg Research made a litany of allegations, including fraudulent transactions and share price manipulation, against the Gautam Adani-led group, which has dismissed the allegations as lies.

    Opposition parties have been demanding a joint parliamentary committee probe into the issue.



    [ad_2]
    #Adani #row #Water #cannon #protesting #AAP #workers #Chandigarh

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Darjeeling politics: Bengal govt to grant land deeds to tea garden workers

    Darjeeling politics: Bengal govt to grant land deeds to tea garden workers

    [ad_1]

    Kolkata: As the fresh political equation in the hills of Darjeeling involving the trio of Bimal Gurung, Ajay Edwards and Binoy Tamang is becoming a major threat to the Bharatiya Gorkha Prajatantrik Morcha (BGPM)-Trinamool Congress alliance, quick granting of land deeds to the people of the hills is going to be the tool for the later to combat the trio.

    After returning to the hills on Friday from Kolkata after a series of meetings with Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and other ministers of the state cabinet, the BGPM chief and Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA)’s chief executive Anit Thapa told the media persons that the state government has assured him of quick beginning and completion of the process of granting of prajapattas (land deeds) to the tea garden workers residing on the land leased by the garden owners from the state government.

    “The process of the review on this count will be completed in the next 10 days, following which the distribution of the prajapattas will start. The chief minister has personally assured me on this count. This is great news for the tea garden workers, whose demand for prajapattas was long standing,” Thapa told mediapersons.

    It was learnt that since the majority of the tea gardens are located on land leased by the state government, there were some technical problems in granting land deeds to the workers residing there.

    Before every election, there had been promises of granting land deeds in the hills, which were hardly fulfilled.

    However, estranged Trinamool Congress leader, Binay Tamang claimed that this promise of granting of land deeds was yet another gimmick by the state government and BGPM before the panchayat polls this year.

    Hamro Party founder Ajay Edwards too said that since GTA has failed in fulfilling each and every promise it made before, the people of the hills have no trust in the fresh promise, on granting of land deeds.

    “What GTA and the state government has done is sheer politics and playing with the sentiments of the tea garden workers,” he said.

    [ad_2]
    #Darjeeling #politics #Bengal #govt #grant #land #deeds #tea #garden #workers

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘It’s about damn time’: College workers organize amid nationwide labor unrest

    ‘It’s about damn time’: College workers organize amid nationwide labor unrest

    [ad_1]

    Workers are demanding increased wages, better health benefits, more job security and improved working conditions, and so far colleges are scrambling to meet them.

    “We have seen the past two to three years a lot of interest from higher ed workers organizing in states that do not necessarily have the collective bargaining rights or the ability to bargain with their employer on their wages and benefits,” said Enida Shuku, an organizer with United Campus Workers who said the group is in discussions with several institutions about joining UCW.

    Even in Southern states, including Tennessee, Arizona and Mississippi, organizers are pressing school leaders about pay and fights over free speech on college campuses.

    “We’re all seeing it and experiencing it … and it’s about damn time,” Shuku said.

    Graduate students typically double as employees for their institutions, teaching general education classes and working as lab assistants while pursuing their degrees. Many workers say they make below a living wage. At Temple, for example, the average graduate student worker can expect to make around $19,500 a year.

    With union-friendly Biden in the White House, campus workers feel they have the extra leverage they need to unionize and strike.

    Under President Donald Trump, campus organizers feared the Republican-majority on the National Labor Relations Board would use their cases to overturn a precedent that allowed graduate students at private universities to unionize, said Mark Gaston Pearce, who chaired the board under President Barack Obama.

    “Anything that required having to go through the board processes was avoided because they did not want to put the board in the position to weigh in relative to that question,” said Pearce, who is now the executive director of the Workers’ Rights Institute at Georgetown University. “Now — that no longer being an obstacle — it’s not surprising that there is a flurry of organizing going on.”

    In fact, Biden has been stocking the NLRB with commissioners who favor unionization among graduate students, something Trump administration appointees once considered banning altogether.

    Boston University graduate students had backed off a unionization drive during the Trump administration, fearing a rejection from the board. But workers regrouped last fall, encouraged by a Democratic majority on the NLRB, and eventually voted to unionize in December.

    “With the shift in political landscape more recently, it kind of lightened the stressors of whether or not we’d be able to unionize to begin with and allowed us to have another go at it,” said Alex Lion, a PhD candidate and organizer at the university.

    UIC faculty almost went on strike in 2019, but the night before they were set to stop work, they agreed on a contract. Following “exhausting” semesters of online instruction, months of inflation chipping away at workers’ earnings and a surge in labor action nationwide, faculty vacated lecture halls in January for four days before agreeing to a contract that will raise the lowest-paid employees’ wages by $9,000.

    “Across the nation, faculty and students everywhere are pretty exhausted,” said Charitianne Williams, a UIC English professor and a member of the union’s bargaining team. “I think that whether you’re faculty union at UIC or in a union at Starbucks, that’s a really difficult space to live in.”

    Campus workers at the University of California got tens of thousands of dollars in raises, larger child care stipends and commuter benefits after weeks on the picket line. University of Washington’s union was able to secure salary boosts and academic freedom protections in January, negating reason to strike.

    Conservative critics, though, argue the successful labor wave could spread universities’ resources thinner — forcing them to slash student worker positions or make other cuts — to afford the raises won during bargaining.

    “The money has to come from somewhere,” said Timothy Snowball, a civil rights attorney at the Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit organization that challenges labor unions, “and I think this is when ideology kind of comes up hard against basic economics.”

    He said the UC strike will have unintended consequences across the system.

    “The best way to view this in my eyes is not really the strikers versus the administration of the UC system,” Snowball said an interview. “The undergrads are the ones who suffered the most, for a public service that the population of California had already paid for.”

    Graduate students laid the groundwork for labor action in 2022. Students at the University of Southern California, Northwestern University in Chicago, Yale University in Connecticut, and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, among others, moved to unionize that year.

    At the California State University system, graduate student workers union president Lark Winner said the UC strike will “absolutely” add to her unit’s leverage as it heads into contract negotiations in the coming weeks.

    “Bargaining does not happen in a vacuum,” Winner said. “All of us were paying attention to what happened at UC, and we need to make those same critical wins that our UC folks did.”

    Labor action is bubbling in right-to-work states in the South too, especially as statehouses move to pass legislation that restricts how educators can discuss “divisive concepts” related to race and gender.

    Bills introduced in 2022 targeted higher education more so than in the previous year, according to PEN America. The free speech advocacy group found that 39 percent of bills in 2022 targeted higher education, compared to 30 percent in 2021. At least four bills were passed in Florida, Mississippi, South Dakota and Tennessee.

    United Campus Workers started about 20 years ago in Tennessee over fair pay and wages at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. When Tennessee’s S.B. 2290 — which outlines how to discuss race and gender at public universities — was signed into law last year, professors began to organize against the law’s restrictions.

    Sarah Eldridge, associate professor of German at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, said while state laws do not allow collective bargaining, the union that represents all campus workers has managed to boost non-tenure track faculty pay by about $9,000 in the last six years. Their graduate student union committee also recently won a fight to waive administrative fees that were being imposed on their stipends.

    But when the bill took effect, the union got fired up again.

    Some tenured professors are looking to continue to protest the law each semester, despite pushback from state legislators. The union is now urging the university to increase campus minimum wage to $20 an hour immediately, and to $25 an hour by 2025.

    While campus workers can’t officially go on strike in the state and don’t have immediate plans to do so, Eldridge said: “Never say never.”

    Mackenzie Wilkes contributed to this story.

    [ad_2]
    #damn #time #College #workers #organize #nationwide #labor #unrest
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biggest day of industrial action in Britain as teachers, workers strike over pay

    Biggest day of industrial action in Britain as teachers, workers strike over pay

    [ad_1]

    London: Britain on Wednesday faced what has been dubbed the biggest industrial action in a decade as teachers, university lecturers, train and bus drivers and public sector workers went on a strike to demand better pay conditions.

    British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s official spokesperson admitted that the mass strike action will prove “very difficult” for the public.

    Teachers in England and Wales who are members of the National Education Union (NEU) are staging walkouts, affecting an estimated 23,000 schools. Estimates suggest around 85 per cent of schools in the regions will be fully or partially closed, impacting working parents over childcare.

    UK Education Secretary Gillian Keegan has insisted that “inflation-busting” pay rises are impossible even as talks remain ongoing.

    “I am disappointed that it has come to this, that the unions have made this decision. It is not a last resort. We are still in discussions,” the minister said.

    Train drivers from the RMT and Aslef workers’ unions are staging a strike in their long-running dispute over pay and conditions, including bus drivers in London. Around 100,000 civil servants employed in 124 government departments and other public sector bodies are also on strike in a dispute over better pay and working conditions.

    Workers’ unions have argued with employers for higher pay rises to combat record-high inflation and real-term cuts in income over the past decade.

    But ministers continue to insist increasing wages to higher levels would only fuel the cost-of-living crisis and hamper the Sunak-led government’s top priority of cutting down soaring inflation over the coming weeks and months.

    Further health sector strikes are planned next week, when nurses and ambulance workers take another round of strike action from February 6 over better wages and working conditions.

    [ad_2]
    #Biggest #day #industrial #action #Britain #teachers #workers #strike #pay

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Agitating K’taka Anganwadi workers threaten to lay siege to CM’s residence

    Agitating K’taka Anganwadi workers threaten to lay siege to CM’s residence

    [ad_1]

    Bengaluru: The State Anganwadi Employees Association has given a 48 hours deadline to the ruling BJP government in Karnataka for fulfilling the demands of Anganwadi workers, failing which it has threatened to lay siege to the residence of the Chief Minister in Bengaluru.

    Thousands of Anganwadi (government preschool) workers are staging a protest demanding gratuity and implementation of the Supreme Court guidelines. The protest is being staged in Bengaluru and completed eight days on Tuesday.

    S. Varalakshmi, Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) President warned that “if Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai does not give orders fulfilling their (Anganwadi workers’) demands, thousands of Anganwadi workers, who are staging protests would lay siege to the residence of Chief Minister Bommai”.

    “The functioning of Anganwadi centers should be changed and elevated in order to ensure that every child in the state gets food and education. Gratuity should be given to Anganwadi workers. It has been eight days since the protest began. Minister for Women and Child Welfare Halappa Achar has not bothered to look into the issue. This ignorance is condemnable,” she asserted.

    The notice in this regard has been given to Minister Halappa on January 3. The meetings have been conducted at the level of directors twice, and the protests have been staged at the Freedom Park and district centers last year. “However, Minister Halappa and officers are not ready to come for talks,” Varalakshmi stated.

    Chetan Ahimsa, Kannada actor and activist said that for eight days, Anganwadi workers have been protesting for structural changes including the demand to be classified as ‘teachers’. Anganwadi women serve society’s neediest like kids and pregnant women. “I express my solidarity with them,” he said.

    [ad_2]
    #Agitating #Ktaka #Anganwadi #workers #threaten #lay #siege #CMs #residence

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana Congress offers support to beedi workers in the state

    Telangana Congress offers support to beedi workers in the state

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: Former Minister and ex-leader of opposition in Telangana Legislative Council Mohammed Ali Shabbir on Sunday assured the beedi workers that the Congress party would provide all required assistance to protect their livelihood, health and survival.

    As part of the ‘Haath Se Haath Jodo’ Abhiyan, Shabbir Ali held an interactive session with beedi workers, thekedar and others related to the industry at Kamareddy District Congress Committee.

    Speaking on the occasion, Shabbir Ali said that nearly seven lakh workers were employed by 14 major Beedi industries in Telangana. However, the BJP government at the Centre and the BRS Govt in the State did nothing to eradicate poverty among beedi workers or address their health concerns.

    Referring to a recent study done on the condition of beedi workers of Telangana, he said the workers were getting poor wages, facing exploitation by middlemen and they have no social security. He said lakhs of workers were forced to continue with the Beedi industry as they do not have any alternative means of livelihood.

    Shabbir Ali said the workers, mainly women, were dependent on Beedi rolling for their livelihood. He said most of the beedi workers were suffering from serious health problems. However, he said they have no access to medical facilities. At least there is no ESI hospital for Beedi workers anywhere in the country, including Kamareddy.

    The Congress leader slammed the BJP at the Centre for imposing 28 per cent GST on the Beedi industry. He said that the move was intended for crippling the entire industry although it employs lakhs of people. Further, he alleged that the Modi Govt was targeting the poor Beedi workers in the name of discouraging tobacco.

    “Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, during the Bharat Jodo Yatra, had a detailed interaction with the Beedi workers to understand their problems. He had promised that the next Congress government will remove the GST from the Beedi industry.”

    Shabbir Ali said that the Beedi workers work hard for nearly 19 hours hour every day to earn their livelihood. Despite so much hard work, due to rising inflation, most of them do not even get a proper meal every day.

    The Congress leader said that the Central collects about Rs 100 crores annually from the Beedi industry in Telangana state in the form of cess. But there are no schemes to help the workers when they are in trouble. He demanded that the Center fix proper wages for the Beedi workers and provide PF cards to all workers attached to the Beedi industry. He said the Minimum Wages Act should be implemented and the wages of Beedi workers should be increased.

    [ad_2]
    #Telangana #Congress #offers #support #beedi #workers #state

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • MP: Bajrang Dal workers arrested for slogans against Prophet get bail

    MP: Bajrang Dal workers arrested for slogans against Prophet get bail

    [ad_1]

    The four Bajrang Dal men who were arrested on Thursday for raising derogatory slogans against Prophet Muhammed in Indore, Madhya Pradesh, were granted bail by a sessions court on Sunday.

    The Bajrang Dal workers were protesting against the release of Shah Rukh Khan’s new movie ‘Pathaan’ on January 25 in front of a cinema hall.

    They shouted provocative slogans like, “Mohammed tere baap ka naam ‘Jai..” and “Desh ke gaddaro ko…“.

    The news of the protest soon spread in the city irking many local Muslims who took to the streets opposing the slogans against the Prophet.

    Four of them were arrested by the police under sections 295(A) (Deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage religious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or religious beliefs), 153(A) (Promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence), 505 (Punishment for criminal intimidation) and 34 (Acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) of the Indian Penal Code has been registered.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Bajrang #Dal #workers #arrested #slogans #Prophet #bail

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • MP: 4 Bajrang Dal workers held for Islamophobic slogans in Indore

    MP: 4 Bajrang Dal workers held for Islamophobic slogans in Indore

    [ad_1]

    A day after derogatory slogans were raised against Prophet Muhammad by Bajrang Dal workers in front of a cinema hall in Indore, Madhya Pradesh, police arrested four Hindu men on Thursday.

    The Bajrang Dal workers were protesting against the release of Shah Rukh Khan’s new movie ‘Pathaan’ on the previous day.

    Speaking to media persons, Indore’s police commissioner Harinarayanachari Mishra said, “We are keeping an eye on fake news that disrespects any religion. Strict action will be taken against those who post such news to disrupt peace in the city.”

    A case under sections 295(A) (Deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage religious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or religious beliefs), 153(A) (Promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence), 505 (Punishment for criminal intimidation) and 34 (Acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) of the Indian Penal Code has been registered.

    On Wednesday, the Bajrang Dal members shouted provocative slogans against Prophet Muhammed like, “Mohammed tere baap ka naam ‘JaiShriRam‘, Desh ke gaddaro ko.. goli maaro.“

    The news of the protest soon spread in the city irking many local Muslims who took to the streets opposing the right-wing protests.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News



    [ad_2]
    #Bajrang #Dal #workers #held #Islamophobic #slogans #Indore

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )