All posts by mpositiveone@gmail.com

Antique cannon recovered

The city police recovered a 17th century antique cannon at an under construction site at Nayapool on Wednesday. The contractor, Lateef, found the cannon while digging for laying pillars.

“The State Archaeological department officials told us that the cannon might have been used during the siege of Golconda Fort by the forces of Aurangzeb. They surmise that it is one of the most advanced cannons of that period,” Inspector Task Force (East) team, Ch Sridhar said.

The cannon is 6.5 ft long with a diameter of 4 inches and weighs 800 kg.

Animal oil

extraction unit

The Commissioner’s Task Force (East) team on Thursday raided a godown at Chaderghat where oil was being extracted from animal fat illegally.

The police seized 24 barrels of oil, 50 kg of body parts of animals and a DCM vehicle.

Additional Deputy Commissioner, Task Force, N. Koti Reddy, said that the owner of the unit, Salar Qureshi, 62, procured organs of cattle and converted it into fat in big cauldrons. He claimed that the produce was supplied to soap manufacturing units in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.

Two persons held

Two persons who allegedly bought 1.5 kg of gold from a gang of chain snatchers were arrested by the West Zone police on Thursday.

The accused persons, Mohd Irfan of Bandlaguda and Shyam Sunder Sugand of Gulzar Houz, procured gold chains from a gang of chain snatchers, who were arrested by the police in December.

The gang members, including Lamba Hussain, Mirza Azmath Ali and Mohd Akheeluddin, were involved in 230 chain snatching cases reported in the city.

VRO arrested

Anti-Corruption Bureau officials on Thursday arrested Yakapur Shivakumar, Village Revenue Officer of Rompally in Bantwaram mandal of Ranga Reddy district on charge of accepting Rs. 3,000 bribe from a person. The VRO received the sum from a villager to change names in revenue records, according to a press release.

He will be presented before a local court.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Staff Reporter / Hyderabad – January 30th, 2015

Over a cup of evening tea : A Stent for the Stuntman !

by Dr. K. Javeed Nayeem, MD

Readers who had been following my Delhi Diary may have noticed that I had missed a column last Friday. There could not have been a more serious reason for doing so because I narrowly missed having a massive heart attack the previous day and thankfully lived to tell you about it this Friday !

It was a routine Thursday evening and while most of you were relaxing in your homes after having celebrated Sankranthi, I was relaxing too at home with my family. My brother was trying to draw my attention to some files but I found that I was having some difficulty in concentrating on them. I had just then begun to notice that my chest was feeling unusually heavy and I told him so. When I tried to get up to tell my wife also about it I found that I felt dizzy and began to break out in a cold sweat, the two classical signs of rapidly falling blood pressure, to any doctor.

Quickly suspecting that I was having a heart attack, I pulled out my wallet in which I always carry some emergency medications and popped a tablet of Nitroglycerine under my tongue and told my family members about it. I then lay down on the sofa and asked my daughter to get me aspirin tablets from our medicine cabinet and put eight of them into my mouth. I also asked her to calculate and tell me the total dose. Satisfied with it, I chewed them up quickly and asked my wife to elevate my legs and hold them that way to prevent my blood pressure from becoming dangerously low.

Having done all that could be done by way of first-aid at home, I asked my daughter to call up my Interventional Cardiologist friend Dr. Arun Srinivas from my mobile which she did and announced that he was on the line. I quickly told him what had happened and what I had done and explained that I would not be able to safely reach Apollo Hospital, the place of his work due to the long distance and would therefore proceed to Vikram Hospital which was much closer to my home and heart too!

Without a second thought he said that he would himself arrange to rush a cardiac ambulance with a crisis team to my house and would meet me at Vikram upon my arrival. My brother suggested that he would drive me to the hospital immediately in the car without wasting any more time but I explained to him that an ambulance would be better because it would have a supply of Oxygen and a defibrillator on board.

A defibrillator is a machine that delivers an electric shock to re-start the heart in case of a cardiac arrest. I knew that at this stage as things stood now, the odds of my dying versus surviving stood at 75:25! Although we doctors on many occasions give patients more optimistic figures, here in my own case I could not dodge the truth. But after having done everything possible by way of first-aid, there was nothing more I could do while waiting for the ambulance except hoping for the best. I then said a silent prayer for my recovery and lost myself in the calmness of my own thoughts till my reverie was broken by the distant wail of the ambulance siren.

Although there was a doctor and a nurse on board, all along the route to the hospital I kept asking for the readings of my blood pressure and oxygen saturation. It is a very difficult situation when a doctor becomes a patient but being my colleagues the poor duo put up with my insolence without a murmur of protest. As I was wheeled into the CCU, I saw my friend Dr. Arun smiling at me with his entire crisis team standing in readiness in the background. He was the nimble fingered ‘Angioplasty-Man’ whose competence I had trusted over more than a decade to look after not only hundreds of my cardiac patients but also dozens of my close relatives. And, Vikram Hospital was home turf for me where ever since its inception until the very same morning I had been playing the life-saving game with the very same team that was now standing in readiness to save my own life! Dr. Upendra Shenoy, the Chief Cardio Thoracic Surgeon was there with his assistant Dr. Sujay. Dr. Seethalakshmy, the Chief Cardiac Anaesthetist was there with Dr. Ismail Khan, her assistant, which immediately reassured me that my chances of surviving now probably stood reversed from what they were half an hour ago!

While preparations were being made by the staff to get me ready for an angiogram and a possible angioplasty, I discreetly called the two anaesthetists to my side and sheepishly told them that my pain threshold was very low and so they had the most important job of the day. I requested them to see that I got a shot of Midzolam, the short-acting general anaesthetic before Dr. Arun was even allowed to touch me, which they promised to do.

Just four days ago, at Geeth Gaatha Chal, the doctors’ musical programme, Dr. Seethalakshmy had lilted the audience with her husband, singing “Tere bina zindagi se koi shikwa to nahin.” Now with her at my head end, I had absolutely no ‘shikwa’ and so I closed my eyes. When I opened my eyes without having felt the slightest discomfort, let alone pain, I could see on the monitor in front of me that blood was once again flowing freely through the arteries around my heart. In a jiffy Dr. Arun had performed a successful angioplasty having cleared the offending block that had threatened my life until five minutes ago. God had been kind and with the help from family and friends and modern technology, damage to my heart had been averted and my life had been saved!

When I turned and looked through the observation window into the console room adjacent to the Cath-lab, I saw the smiling faces of many fellow doctors. Dr. S. Bhaskar, Senior Physician and the Director of Vikram Hospitals, was there with Dr. C. B. Keshava Murthy, the Chief Cardiologist. Dr. Janardhan, another Cardiologist friend too was with them. Mr. Dayashankar Rao, the General Manager, was there, not surprisingly, in his house clothes. On hearing about my problem, he had rushed to the hospital without wasting time even to change. They were all showing me thumbs up signs to reassure me that everything had gone well and I in turn waved out to them to tell them that I was feeling fine. It was a perfectly timed, rescue angioplasty described as the ideal in the text books.

After that it was an endless stream of visitors while I was recuperating in the CCU. There was no way they could be restrained from coming as the doctors and nurses amongst them far outnumbered the others. SOM too was very much with me. KBG called up from the distant land where he was on a holiday even as his son Vikram Muthanna was holding my hand in his by my side. Just a few moments ago, Meera Appaiah, the lady sub-editor was there with an anxious look plainly visible behind her smile and with her finger on her lips like a nursery class teacher, urging me not to strain myself by speaking! It was a strange situation. Everyone was asking me not to speak and here I was eager not to seem like a sick man, by remaining silent.

That is why when my cousin Dr. Irfan Riazi, who is also a poet, came to see me, I just uttered Allama Iqbal’s couplet… “Yeh dastoor-e-zaban bandi kaisa teri mehfil mein? Yehaan to baat karne ko tarasti hai zabaan meri.” (What kind of a strange restriction is this on speech in your gathering? My tongue is in fact dying to say a few words here!” Then came Dr. Lata Muthanna, my close friend and professional colleague whose sense of humour was what I was waiting for since morning. She said that I should not have had this setback just because I should not be getting such easy topics to write about in my column! She was the one who suggested the title that I have chosen for this article today. I did not have the courage to ask her for any alternate choices for fear that she might end up suggesting something like: “A Plasty even for the Nasty!”

I had spent exactly four decades going in and out of hospitals as a doctor but this was the first time in my life that I had got admitted to a hospital as a patient and it was a very different kind of experience, being at the receiving end of medical care. But the care that I got, not only from the doctors but also from the nursing and house-keeping staff at the hospital was what touched me most. While we all think that the role of doctors is indeed unique, after my brief stint as a patient I could not help feeling that while they do touch our lives, it is actually the work of the nurses that touches God’s heart!

Upon my discharge I insisted on driving back home myself which I did just to reassure my family members that I was once again in good health. Long before I got married I had read somewhere that the secret of being happy in marriage lay in the dictum, “No matter how well she looks after you, you must always manage to look a little sad!” Perhaps it was now the right time to put this to the litmus test. So the next day I perhaps managed to pull this off admirably well as my wife after trying to keep me comfortable for a good part of the day probably sensed that I was not as cheerful as she wanted me to be. So she softly asked me if I would like to visit the book exhibition that was going on in the city. Feigning a look of utter surprise, I nodded my head imperceptibly and said that we could do that for just a few minutes. We spent well over an hour there while I picked up enough books for a year’s reading and said goodbye to my fake sad look, happy that it had worked!

Having pulled my hand away from the icy cold clasp of the angel of death, I have now realised how uncertain this journey of life is. No one could have described it better than the poet Mirza Ghalib when he said “Rau mein hai raksh e umar, kahan dekhiye thamein. Naa hee haath laghaam pe hai, Na paaun hain laqaab mein.” (Life goes at a galloping pace… who knows where it will stop. Neither are my hands on the reigns nor my feet in the stirrups!) Do ponder over it… like how I’ve been doing since last week!

[To be continued]

e-mail: kjnmysore@rediffmail.com

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Feature Articles  / January 23rd, 2015

You need to be mad to be a musician, says Benny Dayal

Should you have a backup plan for your dreams? I wonder as I manoeuvre my way towards the makeshift interview room, through the fans who have gathered in huge numbers to click selfies with Benny Dayal, one of Bollywood’s singing sensations. The versatile musician was in Mysuru recently to perform at SPI’s 20th anniversary celebrations.

“There was no question of a backup plan as failure was never an option. I had wanted to be a singer since I was a thirteen- year-old child. I had decided that I would want to sing until I die,” says Benny Dayal candidly, when Sujata Rajpal met him for Star of Mysore after his rocking performance. He still has ample energy to answer a volley of questions. Now read on…

BennyDayalMPOs29jan2015

By Sujata Rajpal

SOM: I just watched your show. You have unbounded energy on stage. What drives you?

Benny Dayal (BD): I am mad when I am on stage, but I am a very different and quiet person off stage. I become another human being when I am on stage. Just the feel to be on stage and singing in front of the audience gives me energy. Mad people are the most energetic; one needs to be mad to be a musician. Music or for any art for that matter is a gift from God. Does God gift the entire world to be a musician? No. Therefore, if you are the chosen one, you need to make use of this gift to your optimum potential.

SOM: What challenges did you face to reach where you are today?

BD: It was the most difficult to get a break, as no one was willing to take a risk with a new artiste. No one wanted to launch me but God has a plan for everyone and I am here today. And then I met A.R. Rahman whom I had no intention of meeting or even expected to meet. Today I owe my success to Rahman. He broke all barriers. He is renowned for giving opportunities to new and unheard voices. Today, the youngsters want to become musicians only because of him.

SOM: Once a music director told you that you can’t become a singer; how did that affect you? Did you want to prove him wrong?

BD: Music is not about proving a point. I didn’t want to prove anyone wrong but this triggered the worst possible emotion in me. It never crushed me. Unknowingly I took the positives out of it; I wanted to bring out the best in me. Everything has an equal and opposite reaction. I thank everyone who has ever said anything positive or negative about me; it helped me to go a step further in my journey. Every single line has affected me positively.

SOM: Which is your favourite song?

BD: I have no favourites. I love to sing all songs. They all are stepping-stones, how can I skip one and go to the next one?

SOM: Which is your favourite language as far as singing is concerned?

BD: I have a flair for languages; I can sing in any language — Malayalam, Hindi, Tamil and Telugu.

SOM: Do you have any role models or inspiration?

BD: Rahman is my role model and inspiration. He is not only one of world’s most accomplished musicians but also an amazing human being. He has launched the music career of so many like me. May his tribe grow!

SOM: You have performed at various countries; which is your most memorable performance?

BD: Yes, one performance was like a dream come true. In 1998, I went to watch Rahman’s concert in Dubai, UAE. Ten years later, in 2008, in Dubai again, I was with him backstage and performing with him. It was an amazing feeling. It was like seeing a dream come true.

SOM: What advice would you like to give to wannabe singers or to anyone who want to follow their passion?

BD: Do what makes you happy, you will surely excel. Never stop learning, never think that you know enough. Learn as you earn. Never stop earning and never stop learning. That is the only way to go forward. Have an open mind and passion for anything that you do. Most importantly, observe others. You may not like one particular song but if many people like it so there must be something in that. Don’t have a closed mind. Everyone has a path; you will also find your’s sooner or later.

Then he reads out aloud the back page blurb from ‘The Other End of the Corridor’, my debut novel that I presented to him after the interview — ‘When your dreams are tainted with lies and deceit, you have no other choice but to walk to the other end of the corridor…’

He speaks after a long pause, “Everyone has a path. Literally, my life was like a dark corridor, there was only darkness; I was crazy and continued to walk on. I didn’t care even if I tripped but I wanted to just go on, and then a door opened and God said, now you walk on this path…” and the singing star signs off.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Feature Articles  / January 23rd, 2015

City girls in State Athletic team for National Games

Bengaluru :

Mysuru’s athletes Reena George, P.S. Uma, W.R. Harshitha, K .C. Shruthi, G.K. Namitha and Priyanka S. Kalagi have been selected for the Karnataka Women’s Athletic Team which will take part in the 35th National Games to be held at Trivandrum from Jan.31 to Feb.15.

The team: Men: G.N. Bopanna, N. Vaishak, V. Sanjay, Salman Abbas, Jayaprakash Shetty, Jagadeesh Chandra, Prashanth Kumar, M.K. Sumanth, S.E. Samsheer, Avin Kumar, Rositto Sax, S. Harshith, B. Chethan, Karthik, P. Balakrishna, Abhishek N. Shetty, A.K. Raghu, Vishwambar, Ranjan Kariappa, Manju, Saleem Shaik, K.A. Bharath.

Women: H.M. Jyothi, Praneetha Pradeep, G.K. Vijaya Kumari, Meghana Shetty, Pragna S. Prakash, M. Arpitha, G.M. Aishwarya, Sahana Kumari, Joyline M. Lobo, Khyati S. Vakaria, J.S. Priyanka, M.R. Poovamma, Ashwini Akkunji, M.G. Padmini, P.S. Uma, Reena George, W.R. Harshitha, K.C. Shruthi, G.K. Namitha, Priyanka S. Kalagi.

Coaches: Dinesh Kumar and C. Muralidharan; Managers: H.R. Uday Kumar and M. Lakshmana.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Sports News / January 23rd, 2015

Shah Rukh Khan video tweets his fans, first Indian to try the feature

Shah Rukh Khan is one of the most popular Bollywood celebs on Twitter. He likes to interact with his fans through the micro-blogging website.

On Wednesday, the Badshah of Bollywood gave another treat to his fans in the form of video tweet and became the first Indian to try out Twitter’s new feature.

SRK has 11.1 million followers on the micro blogging site.
SRK has 11.1 million followers on the micro blogging site.

The new feature called Twitter’s mobile video allows users to capture, edit and share videos right from the Twitter app. Twitter’s Mobile Video Camera and inline editing experience lets you capture and share videos up to 30 seconds in an instant and express yourself much beyond 140 characters.

This is the message SRK tweeted to his fans and followers. He also promised to share regular videos from his rehearsals, shoots and his casual outings on Twitter for his fans.

https://twitter.com/iamsrk?original_referer=http%3A%2F%2Findiatoday.intoday.in%2Fstory%2Fshah-rukh-khan-video-tweets-his-fans-first-indian-to-try-the-feature%2F1%2F415814.html&related=null&tw_i=560390206763700225&tw_p=tweetembed

He said, “Hi everybody. I think this is really cool that now I can video you guys, talk to you on video on Twitter for 30 seconds. So I am gonna send you some videos or shots from where I am working or when I am rehearsing or otherwise. See you guys soon. I think this is really cool. B-bye.”

SRK has 11.1 million followers on the micro blogging site.

source: http://www.indiatoday.intoday.in / IndiaToday.in / Home / January 28th, 2015

The man who made toys for Obama

Rahim Khan…artist..from Channapatna

About This Video : The Karnataka government is presenting a few finely crafted Channapatna toys to Barack Obama, the chief guest of this years Republic Day parade. When the President had come visiting in 2010, the first lady Michelle Obama had bought a few Channapatna toys in New Delhi.

source: Videos – Deccan Herald / You Tube

http://www.deccanherald.com/videos/watch/8739/man-made-toys-obama.html

Hockey: Ambassador XI, Team Coorg hog limelight at Republic Day of Indian Hockey Festival

Members of the Ambassador’s XI pose for a group photo after their title triumph. Photo – Supplied
Members of the Ambassador’s XI pose for a group photo after their title triumph. Photo – Supplied

Muscat:

Indian Ambassador XI and Team Coorg hogged the limelight at the eighth Republic Day of India Hockey Festival at the Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex in Bausher.

The festival was organised by Team Coorg and Friends of Naqvi Group to mark the 60th year of Indo-Oman diplomatic relations and 66th Republic Day of India under the patronage of Indian Embassy and the Oman Hockey Association (OHA).

Indian Ambassador J.S. Mukul was the chief guest and OHA chairman Sheikh Mahfoodh Juma Al Juma was the guest of honour.

The festival was supported by Mohammed Rafiq & Partners LLC, Dr. Mujeeb Hussain (Amana Modern Medical Center), Sandeeep Gupta of Global Pioneer Solutions (GPS), Pocari Sweat (Muscat Pharmacy) and Quality Printing Press.
The matches were played in a festive atmosphere and hockey lovers and their families turned up in large numbers to witness the keenly fought matches.

In the first match, the Indian Ambassador XI met their match in the young Indian School Al Seeb and the full time score read 2-2. The Ambassador XI managed to retain the Ambassador Cup 2015 which they had won in 2014 also, prevailing by a 3-2 margin in thrilling penalty shootout.

In the second match, Team Coorg (Muscat) faced Beatrice Sports Club in an exciting tie for the Republic Day Cup 2015. Team Coorg met a strong challenge from Beatrice Sports Club and the final result of 3-2 in favour of the Team Coorg is an indicator of the closely contested match.

The proceedings commenced with a two minute silence in memory of the departed King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia. The choir from Indian School Al Seeb rendered the national anthems of Oman and India and were awarded with certificates signed by the Indian Ambassador.

A novel competition was organised on the occasion for young students and participants for correct recitation of the Indian National Anthem and all participants were awarded certificates by J.S. Mukul and Sheikh Mahfoodh Ali Juma Al Juma.

The organisers also came up with a unique gesture to honour several personalities for their contribution to promotion of hockey — Mustafa Lawati (former OHA general secretary), Mohammed Shambeh Al Raisi  (former member of FIH Development Committee), Abdul Rehman (former national coach and international umpire), Belu Kuttappa (Manager, Team Coorg), Mohammed Osama Rawat (Festival Coordinator), Shakunthala Boppanna (athlete and national player) and Mohammed Irfan (Organizing Committee). Media personalities were also honoured.

Inayat Naqvi, former Bombay XI player and national umpire, was presented with a memento for his admirable services as the trustee of the NGO Abhi Foundation for supporting under privileged children and providing them with free kit for hockey, football and athletics and appointing trained coaches for them.

The Ambassador of India expressed his gratitude for celebrating Republic Day of India and congratulated all participants, spectators and sponsors. Sheikh Mahfoodh Ali Juma Al Juma also praised the organisation of the festival and congratulated the Indian Ambassador.

SAS Naqvi, former technical advisor of Oman Olympic Committee and now a sports consultant, proposed vote of thanks and acknowledged the support and services rendered by the sponsors, participants and media, while thanking the special guests.

source: http://www.timesofoman.com / Times of Oman / Home> Sports / by Times News Service / January 27th, 2015

Mysuru athletes for Colombo meet

Seen in the picture are Porush, Nanjaiah, Srikanth (Sec. MDAA), Mercy Joyner, Vasu (Chairman MDAA), Mahamad Naveed, Suhas S. Gowda, Sumanth, Karthik Prasad, Vijay Samraksh, Druva, Vishesh S. Gowda, Unnathi Lokesh, Aleena Maria.
Seen in the picture are Porush, Nanjaiah, Srikanth (Sec. MDAA), Mercy Joyner, Vasu (Chairman MDAA), Mahamad Naveed, Suhas S. Gowda, Sumanth, Karthik Prasad, Vijay Samraksh, Druva, Vishesh S. Gowda, Unnathi Lokesh, Aleena Maria.

Mysuru District Athletic Association has selected Mysuru District Athletic team to represent Mysuru District in Colombo-Mysuru District Athletic Championship – 2015, organized by Colombo (Srilanka) District Athletic Association at Shivadasa Stadium, Colombo, Srilanka on Jan. 24 and 25

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Sports News / Thursday – January 22nd, 2015

Minorities commission to set-up legal cell

Karnataka State Minorities Commission Chairperson Balkis Banu is seen addressing media in city yesterday as Zoo Authority Chairperson Rehana Banu looks on
Karnataka State Minorities Commission Chairperson Balkis Banu is seen addressing media in city yesterday as Zoo Authority Chairperson Rehana Banu looks on

Mysuru :

The Karnataka State Minorities Commission will soon set up a cell to provide legal assistance to innocent members of minority communities arrested by the Police.

Addressing press persons at the Government Guest House here yesterday, the Commission Chairperson Balkis Banu said that the cell to be headed by a retired Judge, will provide assistance by arranging for lawyers and bearing legal expenditure.

Pointing out that the Commission will ensure that no innocent person is forced to face trouble and difficulties, Balkis Banu expressed concern over increasing instances of arrest of innocent minority communities members by the Police.

The Commission is planning to hold communal harmony meets across the State, particularly in the coastal districts, to eliminate misunderstandings among different communities, she added.

Responding to a question, she said that a report has been sought on the recent arrest of three terror suspects from Bengaluru and Bhatkal.

Balkis Banu also said that she had requested the Home Department for details of the recent arrests, two of whom were arrested in Pulikeshinagar in Bengaluru and one from Bhatkal.

Expressing confidence that the Commission would soon be granted judicial powers, Banu said that Chief Minister Siddharamaiah had agreed in principle to bestow judicial powers to the Commission, that will enable it to summon officials against whom there were complaints. Judicial powers will also allow the Commission to call for official records as documentary evidence, she said adding that at present, the Commission’s summons are not binding on officials.

Continuing, she said the Commission was planning to set up a research centre in the name of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, the founder of Aligarh Muslim University (AMU). Referring to Bidayi scheme that aimed at providing financial assistance to poor muslim women for marriage, Banu said the Commission has asked the State Government to increase the funding by an additional of Rs. 5 crore, which is now Rs. 5 crore.

Pointing out that the commission had received 543 applications under the scheme in Mysuru district, she said 189 beneficiaries have been selected, who would be provided Rs. 50,000 each.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / Thursday – January 22nd, 2015

Smart wards: Nellore woos industrialists

NelloreANDHRA27jan2015

Mayor looks for support from NGOs, NRIs for city’s growth

In the past two decades, Nellore has witnessed vibrant industrial growth, thanks to the establishment of several special economic zones, a deep-water port and thermal power stations in the district.

Though the city has grown by leaps and bounds, financial constraints have been a constant concern.

The municipal corporation is now a cash-strapped body and is looking for means to take up development projects.

Interestingly, the ‘smart ward’ concept has come as a boon for the corporation. Mayor Sk. Abdul Aziz has seized the opportunity by seeking support from various sections for developing the city with their active participation.

He is keen to take help from big industrialists from the city who have settled elsewhere. He has also proposed to rope them in for development of facilities through adoption of various wards.

Making a difference

“We are keen to take the support of a cross-section of society in this endeavour. NRIs and non-governmental organisations should also play an active role in this. With their help, we are sure of making a difference here,” Mr. Aziz said. During his visit to Hyderabad recently, Mr. Aziz had taken up the matter with the TDP leadership.

The possibility of taking wider support from various stake holders rather than simply relying on Janmabhoomi committees for ushering in development under the smart ward concept also came up for discussion then.

According to Mr. Aziz, Janmabhoomi committees will certainly be there, but they will be more effective if industrialists and NRIs are roped in and their active support taken for the process.

Nellore, a vibrant city located close to the Andhra Pradesh-Tamil Nadu border, has come to be the fifth largest city in the State after Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada, Guntur and Tirupati.

According to the 2011 Census, the population of the city was 5 lakh. With the merger of surrounding village panchayats, it crossed 6 lakh.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National> Andhra Pradesh / by G. Ravikiran / Nellore – January 26th, 2015