Tag: young

  • Alabama’s Bryce Young taken with No 1 pick in NFL draft by Carolina Panthers

    Alabama’s Bryce Young taken with No 1 pick in NFL draft by Carolina Panthers

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    Quarterbacks dominated the first part of the NFL draft.

    Bryce Young, CJ Stroud and Anthony Richardson were among the top four picks Thursday night, an expected result in a league where teams know finding a franchise QB is the quickest path to success.

    The Carolina Panthers selected Young, the slender and dynamic Alabama quarterback, with the No 1 pick, seven weeks after making a blockbuster trade with Chicago to move up to get their choice.

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    The Panthers chose the 2021 Heisman Trophy winner over Ohio State’s Stroud, Florida’s Richardson and Kentucky’s Will Levis. New coach Frank Reich said earlier in the week that the organization reached a consensus Monday after several weeks of deliberation.

    Stroud didn’t have to wait long. He went No 2 to the Houston Texans, who then made a blockbuster deal with Arizona to acquire the No 3 pick and selected Alabama edge rusher Will Anderson Jr.

    Richardson then went at No 4 to the Indianapolis Colts, who will begin a sixth straight season with a different starting QB.

    Heading into the draft, there was no consensus beyond the No 1 pick.

    A dual-threat playmaker with a strong arm and an elite combination of instincts and intelligence, Young also possesses the intangibles and characteristics coaches desire, including leadership ability and a strong work ethic.

    But the biggest question about Young is his size. He measured at 5ft 10in 1/8 and weighed 204lbs at the combine. Though he dominated the SEC, some scouts and coaches fear Young may not be able to physically withstand all the hits in the NFL.

    The Panthers couldn’t pass up his superior skills.

    Kyler Murray, the No 1 overall pick in 2019, is the only other QB since 2003 to be selected in the first round after weighing in at 207 pounds or less at the combine.

    “I’m confident in my abilities,” Young said Wednesday. “I don’t know how to play the game another way. I’ve been this size relative to the people around me my entire life. I focus on what I control, and I can’t grow. That doesn’t fall into that category. I can’t get any taller. I focus on myself. I’m confident in myself with what I’ve been able to do and I’m excited for the work it’s going to take.”

    The Panthers have sought an answer at quarterback since moving on from Cam Newton, who was the No 1 overall pick in 2011 and the NFL MVP in 2015 when he led the Panthers to a 15-1 record and a Super Bowl appearance.

    Young had a spectacular career at Alabama and the Panthers are hoping he can deliver the franchise’s first Lombardi Trophy. He played in a pro-style offense under offensive coordinator Bill O’Brien, the former Texans head coach who has returned to the NFL to run New England’s offense.

    Young threw for 4,872 yards with 47 touchdowns and seven interceptions in his first season starting as a sophomore in 2021. Last season, he had 3,328 yards passing with 32 TDs and five picks while playing with a new supporting cast.

    Stroud’s stock had seemingly dropped after reports that he scored poorly in the S2 Cognition test surfaced recently. He told the AP earlier in the day he didn’t know where he would end up going, even saying it could be top 20.

    Instead, Stroud, a finalist for the Heisman Trophy the past two seasons, goes to Houston to help the rebuilding Texans move past Deshaun Watson.

    Richardson might have the most upside of all the QBs in this draft class but he has the least experience. Colts owner Jim Irsay is fond of Philadelphia Eagles QB Jalen Hurts and Richardson has similar playmaking ability.

    He’ll play for Shane Steichen, who was the offensive coordinator in Philadelphia when Hurts developed into an MVP runner-up.

    Defense-needy Seattle took Illinois cornerback Devon Witherspoon at No 5 and the Cardinals moved up to No 6 to select Ohio State offensive lineman Paris Johnson. Las Vegas then chose Texas Tech edge Tyree Wilson and Atlanta made Bijan Robinson the first running back taken in the top 10 since Saquon Barkley went No 2 to the Giants in 2018.

    NFC champion Philadelphia moved up one spot to take troubled Georgia defensive tackle Jalen Carter at No 9 and Chicago went with Tennessee offensive lineman Darnell Wright with the 10th pick.

    At No 11, the Titans passed on Levis for Northwestern offensive lineman Peter Skoronski. Levis and Tennessee’s Hendon Hooker could make it five QBs in the first round a year after Kenny Pickett (No 20) was the only signal-caller to go in the first round.

    The Tampa Bay Buccaneers also passed on Levis at No 19, taking Pitt defensive tackle Calijah Kancey.

    It took until the 20th pick for the first wide receiver to go. The Seahawks chose Jaxon Smith-Njigba. That started a run of four wideouts in a row. The Chargers then took Quentin Johnston, the Ravens grabbed Zay Flowers to team up with Odell Beckham Jr, and the Vikings added Jordan Addison to go with Justin Jefferson.

    Two months after the hometown Kansas City Chiefs celebrated another Super Bowl title with a downtown parade, a sea of red-clad fans lined up in the streets where the century-old Union Station served as the backdrop for the draft.

    Super Bowl MVP Patrick Mahomes and All-Pro tight end Travis Kelce walked on stage with the Vince Lombardi Trophy and riled up the crowd before turning it over to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.

    Mahomes implored fans to scream louder – they did. Kelce asked if they wanted to trade up for the No 1 pick.

    But the Chiefs don’t need a QB. Carolina, Houston and Indianapolis did.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘More than half of my paycheck goes to rent’: young US doctors push to unionize

    ‘More than half of my paycheck goes to rent’: young US doctors push to unionize

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    Young doctors just out of medical school working as resident physicians, fellows and interns at major US hospitals are organizing unions at an increasing rate, citing long-running problems highlighted by the Covid-19 pandemic and a need to rethink the struggles young doctors face in the profession.

    The Committee of Interns and Residents, an affiliate of SEIU, added five unionized sites in 2022 compared with about one a year before the pandemic and the surge has continued in 2023 with multiple union election filings. It currently represents over 25,000 residents, fellows and interns across the US, comprising about 15% of all resident and fellow physicians.

    Over 2,500 residents and fellows at Mass General Brigham in Boston are currently waiting to have a union election date set after filing this year.

    As with other industries facing a renewed interest in unionization from their staff, the US’s rich and powerful hospitals have responded with well-funded anti-union campaigns and tactics to delay union elections and contract negotiations.

    Hospital management has opposed the unionization effort, declining to voluntarily recognize the union, encouraging residents not to sign union authorization cards ahead of the election filing and writing local op-eds in opposition to unionization.

    Since going public with their union plans, staff have been sent emails and been invited to meetings to try to dissuade residents from unionizing, “often counting on myths around what unionizing would mean”, said Dr Sascha Murillo, a third-year internal medicine resident at Massachusetts general hospital.

    “They tried to dangle some carrots with the salary increases and benefit changes that we’re going to see next year, but the only way we’re going to quantify that for the long term is by having a union and an actual contract,” said Murillo.

    The unionizing campaign took off after vulnerabilities in the healthcare system were exposed by the Covid-19 pandemic, she said, with residents working on the frontlines and bearing the brunt of staffing shortages, an influx of Covid-19 patients, and patients who deferred medical care.

    Mass General Brigham offices in Somerville, Massachusetts.
    Mass General Brigham offices in Somerville, Massachusetts. Photograph: Boston Globe/Getty Images

    Residents often work 80 hours or more a week while being paid barely enough to cover rent in expensive cities like Boston. They often cannot leave or change jobs before they complete the three-year residency program.

    “We’re the ones who are often the first faces that patients see. We’re privy to the issues our patients face and want to be able to advocate for our patients,” added Murillo. “These hospital systems are incredibly powerful. We’re seeing a trend across healthcare of these huge mergers and consolidation of power and it’s even more important for all workers in the healthcare system to be able to have a seat at the table to really ensure that those at the top understand what we face day to day in delivering patient care and that we’re able to check that power.”

    About 1,400 residents at Penn Medicine in Philadelphia filed for a union election being held in the beginning of May 2023. Penn Medicine has hired law firm Cozen O’Connor, which specializes in union avoidance, in response to the union organizing effort and has encouraged residents to be wary of the union’s promises.

    “It still feels like we aren’t being heard. It feels like the institution is still sending a message that they know what’s best for us, that they want to stay in a position of power,” said Dr Chantal Tapé, a third-year resident in family medicine.

    Tapé said there was also a need to change the perception of residency programs as an inherently exploitative stage that residents just need to struggle through.

    “Our big push is to have a union so that we have a seat at the table, so that there’s a system for accountability where resident voices are heard and hopefully persists across the years so that the issues that are most important to a resident at Penn 10 years from now have the same sort of venue for being heard as the issues that we’re experiencing right now,” she added.

    Over 450 residents, interns and fellows at George Washington University are voting in a union election on 25 and 26 April.

    “There’s been a large uproar of residents unionizing because residents and fellows across the nation have felt exploited in their jobs, undervalued, underappreciated, overworked in really unsustainable working conditions,” said Dr Marysa Miller, a first-year internal medicine resident at George Washington. “My starting salary was right around $64,000, which when you divide that out into 80-hour work weeks, I make about $15 an hour, far below the living standard in the city, so more than half of my paycheck goes to rent.”

    Ahead of their union election, the Dean of the GW School of Medicine, Dr Barbara Bass wrote an email to all residents where she argued in favor of a direct relationship, referring to the union as a third party and citing concerns about the impacts a union could have on professional and mentoring relationships between faculty and residents.

    “I think that was really just a tactic to try to scare people. And it’s really just not true, and not something that any unionized campaign amongst residents and fellows has seen across the country,” added Miller. “We are really the ones that are on the frontlines,” said Miller. “But ironically, we’re the voice that’s not listened to and I think that’s kind of what’s been seen throughout all of these union campaigns that are popping up through America.”

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    Some 1,200 residents and fellows at Montefiore hospital in New York City won their union election in February 2023, with 82% voting in favor of the union. Residents at Sutter Health California Pacific medical center and Lifelong Medical Care in California also won union elections in 2023.

    Ahead of the union vote in New York City, an anti-union video claimed “a vote for this union is a vote against us, your educational leaders”. The video presentation included slides with a misspelled “no ragrets” neck tattoo to warn about the “permanent decision” of unionizing, followed by a slide of a brain where a doctor encourages residents to use the right part of their brain in deciding on their vote.

    Residents at the University of Vermont medical center, USC Keck and Greater Lawrence family health center in Massachusetts won union elections in 2022, and 1,500 residents at the University of Washington joined the CIR-SEIU.

    At Stanford Health Care in California 1,478 residents and fellows won their union election in May 2022.

    Stanford criticized unions ahead of the vote, claiming they prefer a direct relationship with individual residents. The National Labor Relations Board recently ruled against Stanford for refusing to furnish information before bargaining with the union.

    Dr Philip Sossenheimer, an internal medicine resident at Stanford, explained the union drive was driven by issues residents experienced during the pandemic and doctors wanting to use unionization as a vehicle to address ongoing issues throughout the healthcare system and how those impact residents and patients.

    “Our generation collectively is starting to realize the sort of losses that have come from degradation of labor strength in this country and declining rate of union membership, and I think broadly, as a society, we’re starting to reflect on what that power imbalance means for the average citizen, particularly since as people in this country, we spend a substantial amount of our time at work.”

    The Penn Medicine Hospital on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
    The Penn Medicine hospital on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. Photograph: Charles Mostoller/Reuters

    At Children’s national hospital in Washington DC, residents organized a demonstration across the street from the hospital during lunch breaks to demand better pay, improved staffing, and other demands central to the union in new contract negotiations. Though a contract was settled in December 2022, the hospital is currently taking legal action against the union over the demonstration, claiming the union violated a “no strike” clause. The hospital has not commented on the action due to the pending litigation.

    “It feels like such a retaliation,” said Dr Lydia Lissanu, a first-year resident at Children’s national hospital. “At the very least if it feels like they want to intimidate us even if it doesn’t work, they want us to know they’re very upset with us.”

    Lissanu added that residents have been increasingly organizing unions because of how they were the ones forced to pick up the slack for vulnerabilities exposed in the healthcare system during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    “We’re being asked to pick up the slack essentially from all of the other shortages in the hospital, all of the things that have happened in Covid, all of the pediatric respiratory viruses surging all at once. A lot was expected of us, a lot of slack that we had to pick up with very little recognition, very little reward. We’re asking to be treated fairly and be paid for our labor, we no longer feel that we should be grateful for having this job, they should be grateful for us and what we bring to the table.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Deep drug nexus aimed to destroy J&K’s Young lot: LG Manoj Sinha

    Deep drug nexus aimed to destroy J&K’s Young lot: LG Manoj Sinha

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    Jammu, Apr 21: Jammu and Kashmir Lieutenant Governor Manoj Siniha Friday said that under a well-though out deep-rooted nexus, an attempt is being made to destroy the society and youth of the UT. He, however, was quick to add that the Government will go tough against the drug peddlers and those behind the drug trade.

    As per news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), LG Sinha was speaking at the Rajya Puraskar Ceremony of J&K Bharat Scouts & Guides at Convention Centre, Jammu. LG is the Chief Patron of Jammu & Kashmir Bharat Scouts & Guides, congratulated the Rajya Puraskar Awardee Scouts & Guides and lauded their contribution to the society. “There is a deep rooted nexus of drug peddlers. An attempt is being made to destroy the society and its youth by luring them towards drugs,” he said, adding that the government will go tough against drug peddlers and those promoting the drug business.

    He said that with its aspirational vision, Scouts & Guides is leading the change in society especially by serving vulnerable sections of the community & enabling the youth leaders to drive transformative change. The LG called upon the youth to follow the rich legacy of Mahamana Pt. Madan Mohan Malaviya and dedicate themselves in the service of the nation.

    “The young generation is the key to change and today they are eager to play a bigger role in sustainable economic growth and social cohesion. With their commitment to selfless service, Scouts & Guides is contributing to build an inclusive & prosperous society,” the LG said, adding that in the fast-changing world, Scouts & Guides will have to turn their voice into action. In the partnership with local administration, they must engage in social welfare works to complement the government’s efforts and to develop new youth networks to promote peaceful, equal and just communities. The LG also urged the trainers and teaching community to nurture individual growth and leadership qualities amongst the youth—(KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Unhappy with life, young Asst Prof turns porter in Hyderabad

    Unhappy with life, young Asst Prof turns porter in Hyderabad

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    Hyderabad: Unhappy with his personal life, an Assistant Professor at an engineering college became a porter.

    The bizarre incident occurred at Abdullapurmet on the outskirts of Hyderabad. A youth, working as an Assistant Professor at a private college, went missing on April 7 from the college hostel where he was staying. The college authorities thought that he might have gone to his native place in Khammam district in Telangana and contacted his family. However, the family members informed them that he had not come there.

    After waiting for a few days, the family lodged a complaint with the police, which took up the investigation. The family members told police that in the past he had left home without informing them and was later found working as a porter in a market.

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    Abdullapurmet inspector Sunil Kumar and his team kept a watch at a local fruit market in Abdullapurmet. On Tuesday morning, the police noticed the youth arriving there to work as a porter. They took him into custody and handed him over to his family. The police advised the family to arrange counselling.

    (Photo: Flickr)

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UP: Young woman shot on head, murder weapon discarded near body

    UP: Young woman shot on head, murder weapon discarded near body

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    A 20-year-old woman was shot dead by two unknown people on a motorbike on Monday morning in Jalaun district, Uttar Pradesh.

    The deceased – Roshni Ahirwar – a Bachelor of Arts (BA) student, was returning home after taking a test at her college. The assailants shot her head, left the murder weapon near her corpse and escaped.

    According to the police, a homemade handgun was used for the murder. The local police station is about 200 meters away from the site of the crime.

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    “The assailants were likely acquaintances of the woman and had covered their faces when they approached her,” said the Superintendent of Police (SP) Iraj Raja. A case has been registered and further investigations are on.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • JK Waqf Board Relieves Young Students From Homework And School Bags

    JK Waqf Board Relieves Young Students From Homework And School Bags

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    SRINAGAR: Jammu and Kashmir Waqf Board has issued guidelines for schools under its jurisdiction to implement reformative measures in accordance with the National Education Policy 2020. The Board has stated that there will be no homework for students up to class 2 and no school bags for nursery and UKG students.

    According to a circular issued by the Waqf Board, schools are instructed to follow a daily, monthly, and annual timetable and schedule of activities. The daily timetable is to have six periods, each lasting 30 minutes, for teaching subjects. Five periods are to be reserved for compulsory subjects, such as English, Maths, Science, Social Science, and Urdu, and the sixth period is to be utilized for teaching optional subjects, such as Computers, Kashmiri, Arabic, Islamiyat, and Sufi Saints Literature, on a rotational basis.

    The circular further states that schools must reserve one hour every day for Extra-curricular Activities, which should be split into two parts of 30 minutes each in the first and second half of the day.

    The guidelines state that a house system should be established in every school for intra-school co-curricular and sports competitions. To promote a sense of belongingness and healthy competition among students, school heads are instructed to divide students into four houses: senior boys, senior girls, junior boys, and junior girls. The houses should be named after famous Sufi Saints Hazrat Sheikh Noor-ud-din Noorani (R.A), Hazrat Sheikh Abdul Qadir Jeelani (R.A), Hazrat Sheikh Hamzah Makhdoom (R.A), and Hazrat Shah-e-Hamadan (R.A).

    The sports calendar for the year should include competitions in sports activities, and competitions should also be held throughout the year in co-curricular activities. Three days every month should be reserved solely for sports and co-curricular competitions, with no academic activities to be carried out on those days.

    School authorities must allocate at least one period of thirty minutes per month for house meetings, so that house committee members can interact, motivate, and plan house activities under the guidance of their respective house masters.

    In September and October, Inter Waqf School Competitions will be held and the winners rewarded. Morning assembly will consist of news headlines, a thought for the day, a brief talent show of individual or group students, amazing facts, personality of the day, volunteer for a minute, and other exciting stuff, after brief prayers. Lectures by teachers during morning assembly will be avoided.

    Additionally, there will be no school bag for classes nursery to UKG and no homework for classes from nursery to 2nd. The school bag policy and NEP-2020 guidelines in this regard will be strictly followed. An orientation program for school heads regarding the execution of proposed changes will be held separately. (KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Hyderabad: Asaduddin Owaisi hosts iftar for US Consul General, Senator Todd Young

    Hyderabad: Asaduddin Owaisi hosts iftar for US Consul General, Senator Todd Young

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    Hyderabad: The All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) president and Hyderabad MP Asaduddin Owaisi on Friday hosted an iftar party for the US Consul General Jennifer Larson and Senator Todd Young.

    Later, Jennifer Larson took to Twitter to share her experience at the iftar party. She wrote, “For @SenToddYoung’s last event in #Hyderabad, we attended an iftar hosted by MP and AIMIM leader Asaduddin Owaisi. It was fitting to conclude a great visit with outstanding food and excellent conversation.”

    Earlier, Todd Young visited the new US Consulate in Hyderabad and became the first Senator to visit the new US facility in the city. During his visit to the city, he met IT Minister K. T. Rama Rao for a discussion on Telangana’s present and future as a leader in the IT, life sciences, and defense/aerospace industries. He also visited T-Hub in the city.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • DESK Liberates Young Minds , No Homework Upto Class II

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    SRINAGAR: School Education Department Thursday issued a homework schedule for primary classes and said that there shall be no homework for student’s upto Class-II.

    In a circular, Director School Education Department said that for primary classes, there will be no homework up to Class-Il and a maximum of two hours a week shall be assigned to classes III to V.

    The circular reads that in middle schools from Classes VI-VIII, there shall be a maximum of one hour a day that is about five to six hours a week.

    It reads that at secondary and higher secondary level, there shall be a maximum of two hours a day that is about 10 to 12 hours a week.

    “Teachers need to work together to plan and rationalise the amount of homework that they assign to students,” it reads.

    The order further reads that teachers of a particular class should assign homework after coordinating with each other, thus avoiding the over burdening of homework for a student.

    “As such it is impressed upon all the school heads of both government and private schools to ensure homework to students is given as per the School Bag Policy 2020 and is strictly adhered to,” it reads.

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    #DESK #Liberates #Young #Minds #Homework #Upto #Class

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • DSEK Liberates Young Minds, No Homework Upto Class II

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    SRINAGAR: School Education Department Thursday issued a homework schedule for primary classes and said that there shall be no homework for student’s upto Class-II.

    In a circular, Director School Education Department said that for primary classes, there will be no homework up to Class-Il and a maximum of two hours a week shall be assigned to classes III to V.

    The circular reads that in middle schools from Classes VI-VIII, there shall be a maximum of one hour a day that is about five to six hours a week.

    It reads that at secondary and higher secondary level, there shall be a maximum of two hours a day that is about 10 to 12 hours a week.

    “Teachers need to work together to plan and rationalise the amount of homework that they assign to students,” it reads.

    The order further reads that teachers of a particular class should assign homework after coordinating with each other, thus avoiding the over burdening of homework for a student.

    “As such it is impressed upon all the school heads of both government and private schools to ensure homework to students is given as per the School Bag Policy 2020 and is strictly adhered to,” it reads.

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    #DSEK #Liberates #Young #Minds #Homework #Upto #Class

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Kashmir’s Young Bilal Parray Felicitated with ‘Doctorate for Peace Activism’ – Kashmir News

    Kashmir’s Young Bilal Parray Felicitated with ‘Doctorate for Peace Activism’ – Kashmir News

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    Srinagar, Apr 4: World Peace Institute of United Nations (WPIUN) Monday felicitated Kashmir’s young and eminent young Bilal Ahmad Parray with honorary doctorate degree during a function held in New Delhi.

    The eminent youth peace activist Bilal Ahmad Parray (29), as per GNS, was awarded the Doctorate in the “Peace and Social” stream by World Peace Institute of United Nations (WPIUN) – one of the leading international-level distance education centers in India that provides quality education in various disciplines.

    Considering his contribution in the field Dr. Bilal Ahmad Parray was also felicitated and appointed National Vice President of the World Peace Institute of the United Nations.WhatsApp Image 2023 04 04 at 15.38.09

    Notably Dr. Bilal Parray has tirelessly worked for peace activism in Kashmir since his teenage under the banner of Jammu and Kashmir Development Foundation (JKDF).

    Several political, religious, and social organization heads in separate statements have congratulated Dr. Bilal Parray for this major and outstanding felicitation. (GNS)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )