Mangalore's TRF-sponsored students from Bidar college excel in PU exams

[email protected] (The Hindu)
May 29, 2012

Bidar, May 29: Hundreds of students from Bidar go to Mangalore every year to seek admission to pre-university colleges there.

Hasina Banu and Mohammad Jazeel, however, have reversed this trend.

Students of Shaheen PU College here, these two are from Dakshina Kannada district and have excelled in the II PU examination.

Haseena's father, P. Mohammad, who runs a roadside tea shop at Bantwal in Dakshina Kannada, has four children. Her elder brother is battling cancer and her mother works as a farm labourer.

TRF_student

Clockwise from top left: Mohammed Jazeel, Mohammed Omer Sharief K, Neeta Manohar and Ratnava R B

Spotted

Mangalore-based Talent Research Foundation spotted her after she got 85.6 per cent in SSLC. The foundation referred her to Shaheen college.

She was accepted into the Shaheen Scholars Group and given free tuition and boarding. She secured 86.33 per cent in the PU exam. Haseena is keen on pursuing a career in medicine.

Mohammad Jazeel from Pajuri village in Dakshina Kannada belongs to an impoverished family. His parents are farm labourers and he has 10 siblings. He was sent to Bidar by the Talent Research Foundation. He has scored 90.67 per cent.

Most of the Shaheen Scholars Group members, who are talented students from deprived backgrounds from across the State, have done well.

Omar Sharief of Bangalore won a scholarship to study in the college.

He secured 91.2 per cent in the SSLC exam and 86.33 per cent in the II PU exam. His father, Khader Sharief, works in a tea shop.

Dharwad-based NGO Vidya Poshak had sponsored some students.

Neeta Manohar of Latgeri in Bijapur district is one among them and has secured 85 per cent. Her father is a farmer.

Rathnavva Ramappa of Mulagi in Haveri district, another in the group, has got 82.5 per cent.Her father is a farm labourer who keeps migrating to cities in search of job. She has three sisters.


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coastaldigest.com news network
July 20,2020

Lucknow, Jul 20: Dr Azizuddin Sheikh, who was fighting COVID-19 as a front line worker, passed away after contracting coronavirus in Uttar Pradesh. He is survived by a wife and three small children. 

40-year-old Dr Azizuddin, who hailed from Rajasthan, was serving as a paediatrician at Avanti Bai Hospital and Duffein Hospital, Lucknow for past few years. He had also worked in the Middle Eastern countries. 

When a large number of doctors preferred to stay home following the covid-19 outbreak, Dr Azizudin was working 16 to 17 hours battling the pandemic. 

According to sources, he tested positive for the covid-19 last month. “After the reports came positive, he had to call the concerned authorities many times to take him to the hospital,” recalled his family members.

He was first admitted to Lok Bandhu Hospital and was later shifted to KGMU after his condition deteriorated. Later he was taken to SGPGIMS.
 
“Despite following all the guidelines and taking every precaution while treating coronavirus patients, he tested positive for the covid-19. It’s a shock for all of us,” he said.

He used to console his family members and instill confidence among them, said one of his relatives. 

A local newspaper quoted his friends as saying that he was very dedicated in serving people that he used to take minimal possible fees from his patients. When the family asked him to increase consultation fees his reply would be, “They are poor people, how will they afford”?

After his death, one of his patients Alok Singh wrote about an incident. “When I asked doctor Sahib why he charges so less, his answer was I have to answer Allah. The truth that he has left us will always be the reason for our grief.”

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Agencies
January 19,2020

New Delhi, Jan 19: Senior Congress leader Kapil Sibal on Sunday asserted that every state assembly has the constitutional right to pass a resolution and seek the amended Citizenship Act's withdrawal, but if the law is declared constitutional by the Supreme Court then it will be problematic to oppose it.

His remarks came a day after he had said there is no way a state can deny the implementation of the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) when it is already passed by the Parliament.

"I believe the CAA is unconstitutional. Every State Assembly has the constitutional right to pass a resolution and seek its withdrawal. When and if the law is declared to be constitutional by the Supreme Court then it will be problematic to oppose it. The fight must go on!" Sibal said in a tweet.

His remarks on the CAA at the Kerala Literature Festival (KLF) on Saturday had caused a flutter as several non-BJP governments, including Kerala, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, West Bengal and Maharashtra, have voiced their disagreement with the CAA as well as National Register of Citizens (NRC) and National Population Register (NPR).

"If the CAA is passed no state can say 'I will not implement it'. It is not possible and is unconstitutional. You can oppose it, you can pass a resolution in the Assembly and ask the central government to withdraw it.

"But constitutionally saying that I won't implement, it is going to be problematic and going to create more difficulties," said the former minister of law and justice.

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News Network
February 23,2020

Madikeri, Feb 23: Back-to-back floods and landslides in the last two years, has led to a fall in the number of tourists coming to the coffee-growing region of Kodagu, forcing the district administration to intervene and take confidence-building measures, telling tourists that Kodagu was safe to visit.

According to the statistics of the Karnataka State Tourism Department, Kodagu recorded a moderately good number of tourists in 2018 and 2019, the years that the district witnessed devastating floods and landslides.

The Department’s statistics reveal that 17 lakh tourists visited Kodagu in 2018 and 18 lakh in 2019. This means the flood-ravaged years did attract tourists contrary to what the stakeholders had claimed.

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