Mangalore boy shines in dirt track racing

[email protected] ( Govind D. Belgaumkar for The Hindu)
February 16, 2011

siddanth

Mangalore, February 16: The greatest moment in the career of Siddanth Nayak of Mangalore, an emerging star on the horizon of dirt track racing, came five weeks after he turned 18 on January 7.

At Coimbatore on Sunday (February 13), he was adjudged the First Runner Up in the Rolon National Dirt Racing Championship. “This is the first time that I am getting a national honour,” Siddanth said on Tuesday with a sparkle in his eye. He did not look like being on the cloud nine though.

His father Satish Chandra Nayak, a city-based businessman, however, described the achievement as “excellent”. He too, however, is disheartened that Siddanth could not emerge champion.

It was a fall in the ninth lap in Coimbatore that did him in, the worried father told The Hindu.

Till then, he was placed second in the race and the fall spoiled his chances of becoming a champion. The track was hard and had “tight corners” (sharp curves), Siddanth said. “It was worth a ride,” he said sounding professional. Rolon National Dirt Racing Championship was conducted in four legs over several months in different parts of the country – Chadigarh, Kolhapur, Hyderabad and Coimbatore in that order – and points were given to riders for their overall performance in each leg.

After three legs, Siddanth was among the favourites and his family thought that he had a fair chance of becoming a champion. Hence he participated in it ignoring high fever he was suffering from. The young rider initially did not like to go on record that he had fever, lest others think he was giving an alibi for the failure to clinch the title. Although he began badly in Chandigarh where he did not get any of the top placements, he did well in the next two events and was placed first runner-up in both of them. In Coimbatore, he was placed third.

Siddharth


Motocross

While his father expects him to become “world champion,” Siddanth has set his eyes on riding a bigger bike (called built-bike or dirt bike) and may soon start training in Bangalore. As a beginner, he had been restricted hitherto to 130 cc or 165 cc bikes.

Now, the young man plans to move over to motocross dirt track racing which involves jumping of the bike, for which he needs training. A schedule of training for him to acquire new skill sets is to be drawn soon, he told The Hindu.

Siddanth, who has no qualms in calling himself the best dirt track racer in the city and hates wheeling for fun, will be seen in action in the district next week when he participates in the State-level dirt track race in Sullia. About 100 participants from the State are expected to take part in it. Catch him there, if you can.


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News Network
May 9,2020

Chikkamagaluru, May 9: Karnataka Minister for Tourism C T Ravi on Friday said that Indians who are stranded abroad are being repatriated into the country on the pre-condition of quarantine.

“The Centre is repatriating Indians who are stranded in around 37 countries, amid the lock-down, of which people from Saudi Arabia and Dubai will be brought via ship for free. These people will have to undergo the mandatory quarantine period once they land in the country,” Ravi told media here.

The government has accorded priority to the elderly and pregnant women during the repatriation process. The state government has held due discussions with the Centre in this regard, he added.

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News Network
April 6,2020

Bengaluru, April 6: Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa on Monday said he is following the one-time fasting as per the order by BJP President JP Nadda.

"I am following the one-time fasting as per the order by our national President JP Nadda, on BJP foundation day today, as a mark of respect to doctors, nurses, media personnel," said BS Yediyurappa.

In his message to BJP workers earlier today, Nadda stated, "All BJP Karyakartas to give up one meal on our Foundation Day as a way to show solidarity with people facing hardships during the lockdown. Provide food packets to 5+1 needy under #FeedtheNeedy program. In the next one week, put a system in place where we can provide two homemade face covers to each person at our booth. We should circulate videos of preparation and distribution of such face covers with #WearFaceCoverStaySafe."

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News Network
February 14,2020

Bhuj, Feb 14: In a horrifying incident, as many as 68 undergraduate girls were paraded through their college into the restroom and forced to individually remove their undergarments to prove that they were not menstruating. 

This shameful exercise was conducted at Shri Sahjanand Girls’ Institute (SSGI) in Gujarat’s Bhuj under the supervision of principal and other teachers. 

It all began after the hostel rector complained to the principal that some of the inmates had been violating the Hindu religious norms specifically for menstruating females.

According to the sect’s norms, menstruating females are barred from entering the temple and kitchen. They are even forbidden from touching other students. However, the hostel administration reportedly complained to principal Rita Raninga that some girls who were having their periods not just mingled with other hostel inmates, but also entered the kitchen and ventured near the temple on the premises. 

“It was sheer mental torture and we don’t have words to describe it,” a student who underwent the traumatic experience said, adding that there were total 68 girls who were forced to pass through the test.

“The hostel administration levelled this allegation and insulted us on Wednesday. On Thursday, when we were attending lectures, rector Anjaliben called the principal and complained about this. We were forced to leave our classrooms and queue up outside in the passage. The principal abused and insulted us, asking which of us were having our periods. Two of us who were menstruating stepped aside,” said another victim.

“Despite this, we were all taken to the washroom. There, female teachers asked us to individually remove our undergarments so they could check if we were menstruating,” she added.

Another teenage undergraduate said, “We come from farflung villages. The college campus houses a school that runs classes from Class 1to 12. They provide hostel facilities to the school students. The college does not have its own hostel. We live with the school-kids in their hostel.”

She added, “The principal, hostel rector and the trustees harass us regularly over the issue of menstruation. We are punished for having periods. This happens even if we follow their religious rules. They made us remove our undergarments because they thought some of us were lying about not having periods, and mingling with the others against rules. But the humiliation meted out to us on Thursday was the last straw. When we protested against this, trustee Pravin Pindoria told us that we could take legal action if we wanted but we would have to first leave the hostel. He also forced the students to sign a letter saying nothing happened in college. But enough is enough.”

Kutch University authorities have, meanwhile, swung into action and a five-member team including in-charge vice-chancellor, Darshna Dholakia, and two other senior female professors visited the college on Thursday. “We will speak to the students and the college authority and later initiate appropriate action based on the findings,” Dholakia said.

Run by followers of Swaminarayan Mandir, the college was set up in 2012 but moved into a new building on the premises of Shree Swaminarayan Kanya Mandir in 2014. The college which offers BCom, BA and BSc courses has about 1,500 students of which 68, who come from remote villages, stay in the hostel on campus. The college is known for its pro-Hindutva stance.

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