Monthly Archives: January 2026

First documentary on Kayamkhanis will make you feel proud of this Rajashthan community

RAJASTHAN :

Manjit Thakur, Director of the Kayamkhani Bravehearts

New Delhi :

“There is no Kayamkhani who has been hit with bullets in his back,” says a veteran of the Indian Army, who like many others of his community have dedicated his life to uniform, discipline, and service to the nation.

This documentary, Kayamkhani Bravehearts is the saga of the Kayamkhani, a Muslim community from Rajasthan, whose first preference for a career is military or Police and who consider service to the nation as a matter of pride and responsibility. For them, patriotism is not just a slogan, but a tradition passed down through generations. The documentary is documentation of the story of these valiant sons of the soil who defended the country at the border, faced enemy bullets head-on, and who consider martyrdom an honour.

The first glimpse of the documentary, a 33-second teaser, is enough to send shivers down the spines of viewers. The teaser suggests that this film will not merely be a presentation of facts but an experience steeped in emotion, sacrifice, and patriotism. Watching it, viewers will not only be filled with pride but will also be compelled to understand that in defending the nation, only duty matters, not religion.

The history of the Kayamkhani Muslim community of Rajasthan is replete with valour, discipline, and service to the nation. Almost every family in this community has been connected to the armed forces in some way. The dream of the youth here is not to become a big businessman or an officer in a high-ranking government position, but to serve their motherland by joining the Indian Army, paramilitary forces, or the police.

Watch the teaser here:

Manjit Thakur, director and screenwriter of the documentary, states that soldiers from the Kayamkhani community have so far earned four Shaurya Chakras, 18 Sena Medals, and five Vishisht Seva Medals.These figures would be a source of pride for any community, but for the Kayamkhanis, they represent not just honour, but a symbol of responsibility.When it comes to sacrifice, this community has not lagged.

In Danduri village, which is now known as the “village of soldiers,” 18 Kayamkhani Muslims were martyred for the country. Similarly, 10 martyrs each from Jhajhot and Nua villages also laid down their lives for their motherland. These figures are not just numbers, but represent the tears of those mothers, the pride of those families, and the essence of the soil that gave birth to such brave sons.

The documentary presents the stories of these martyrs in a deeply sensitive and impactful manner. The camerawork, editing, and graphics are of a high standard, emotionally connecting the viewers to the narrative. Research, hard work, and authenticity are evident in every frame.

Before making this documentary, the Awaz-The Voice team conducted comprehensive research. Under the leadership of Editor-in-Chief Atir Khan, the team spent a long time researching, delving into history, and understanding the ground realities. The documentary was shot over several days in different villages of Rajasthan. The filming continued late into the night to present the true lifestyle, struggles, and pride of this community to the world.

The documentary also reveals several surprising facts. For example, Kayamkhani Muslims consider cows their most valuable asset and cannot even imagine harming them. This fact shatters the stereotypes that are often formed in society without proper understanding.

Manjit Thakur recounts that when the team arrived in the Kaimkhani villages, they were welcomed with a sense of pride and warmth. The villagers not only welcomed them wholeheartedly but also openly shared their stories, pain, and pride. This trust became the soul of the documentary.

Speaking about the documentary’s objective, Atir Khan sais that in today’s world, negativity has become the unique selling proposition of news. In this environment, Awaz-The Voice is the sole platform which brings forth positive stories of cooperation, and peaceful coexistence from India and around the world.

Awaz team with locals in a Rajasthan Village

He believes that beyond the walls of faith, caste, region, and language, Indians have many shared concerns, challenges, and dreams for the future that have the potential to bring people and communities together. Awaz-The Voice’s content promotes progressive, positive, and nation-building ideas not only in India but also among Muslim communities abroad.

This documentary is an extension of that very idea—an attempt to amplify the voice of true patriotism, a voice often drowned out by the noise of hatred. This film reminds us that the uniform has no religion, and every drop of blood shed for the country is purely Indian.

On release, this documentary will undoubtedly not only move viewers but also make them think, feel proud and energise them to serve the nation. This is not just the story of the Kayamkhani community, but the story of an India where the country comes first.

source: http://www.awazthevoice.in / Awaz, The Voice / Home> Stories / by Manjit Thakur / posted by Aasha Khosa, ATV / January 17th, 2026

Kerala: CPI(M) MLA Kanathil Jameela dies at 59 after cancer battle

Kuttiyadi (Kozhikode District), KERALA:

Kanathil Jameela, CPI(M) leader and sitting MLA of Koyilandy, passed away late on Saturday at a private hospital in Kozhikode. She was 59.

Jameela, who had been undergoing treatment for cancer, was admitted to the intensive care unit earlier this week. Hospital authorities confirmed that she died around 11.30 pm.

An MLA, former district panchayat president, and one of the most prominent women leaders of the CPI(M) in Kozhikode, Jameela had a long public life that spanned local governance, women’s mobilisation, and welfare work.

During her administrative tenure, she oversaw several notable programmes, including Snehasparsham for kidney patients, a cancer screening drive for women, the KARUNA initiative for humane stray-dog management, a mission to end landlessness, and schemes promoting sports and education.

Jameela had been a district committee member of the CPI(M). She was also the State vice-president of the All-India Democratic Women’s Association.

The CPI(M) state leadership condoled her death, calling it an “irreparable loss.”

Jameela made active interventions in issues concerning the people, Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said. As a leader of the All India Democratic Women’s Association, she was keen to bring to the fore issues concerning women. She garnered respect for her simplicity and friendship across party lines, Vijayan said.

Leaders across parties also issued statements remembering her as an accessible and grounded representative of the coastal constituency.

According to party sources, Jameela’s body will be taken to her residence today. Public homage will be held at the CPI(M) district committee office in Kozhikode and later at the Koyilandy Town Hall.

source: http://www.maktoobmedia.com / Maktoob Media / Home> India / by Maktoob Staff / November 30th, 2025

‘When I Got Home, We Just Cried’: A Muslim Man’s Journey From the Phansi Yard to Acquittal

Younuspur (Jaunpur District), UTTAR PRADESH :

42-year-old Ehtesham Qutubuddin Siddiqui, who was a death row convict for nearly a decade before being acquitted by the Bombay high court earlier this month, reflects on time in prison.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

A tiny 80-square-feet room, fitted inside a compact V-shaped enclosure known as the phansi yard (gallows yard) of Nagpur Central Prison, served as “home” for 42-year-old Ehtesham Qutubuddin Siddiqui for nearly a decade. In 2015, soon after a special Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) court sentenced 12 individuals – five men, including Siddiqui, to death, and the remaining seven to life imprisonment –  in the 2006 Mumbai serial train blasts case, he was transferred to Nagpur jail.

All 12 men were acquitted by the Bombay high court on July 21.

Siddiqui describes his decade-long solitary confinement as a place that made him feel “safe.” “In the existing political atmosphere, especially as Muslim men convicted on terror charges, this isolation was the only way we could have stayed safe in jail,” he feels.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

An incarceration spanning two decades

Reflecting on his two decades of incarceration – nine years as an undertrial prisoner in Mumbai and then as a death row convict in Nagpur – Siddiqui says that while the trial took nearly a decade, the transition from undertrial to death row prisoner was “quite sudden.”

“One minute, we were jostling for space in the overcrowded prison barracks in Mumbai (until the lower court’s verdict), and suddenly, we were thrown into solitary confinement. It was a very small room but it was still ours. It had an attached bathroom, a ceiling fan and a tubelight,” he says, describing the prison room. 

Solitary confinement in India is unconstitutional. Even for death row convicts, it is permissible only after their mercy petition is rejected by the President of India. In the serial train blasts case, the death penalty had not yet been confirmed by the High Court but they were still subjected to solitary confinement. “But none of this really matters. It’s a common practice. The moment a person is given a death sentence, the prison authorities transfer them into the phansi yard,” Siddiqui says, as he recalls the names of many death row convicts housed in the 30 tiny solitary cells near his.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

“Many lacked proper legal representation and were simply abandoned here after the trial court imposed a death sentence. They would arrive here horrified, thinking this was where they would be hanged the very moment they reached there.”

It became almost a duty of other death row convicts like Siddiqui to explain legal procedures, offer advice, and calm newcomers in the phansi yard. Siddiqui says he saw many come and go over those ten years. “Almost all were eventually acquitted in their appeals before higher courts,” he points out.

Siddiqui’s observation is in sync with different studies on the Indian judicial system and capital punishment. The Death Penalty reports that the NLU- Delhi’s Project 39A (now renamed as The Square Circle Clinic after it shifted its base to NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad), a criminal justice research and legal aid programme released every year has long established the pattern of death penalties getting either commuted to life or lesser punishment or in many cases, simply ending up in acquittals. 

Siddiqui recalls his interactions with five men from the Shinde family, who were sentenced to death by a trial court in a rape and murder case, only to be later acquitted by the Supreme Court. The Shindes, from a Nomadic Tribal community, endured 16 years of incarceration, 13 as death row convicts.

“They would keep asking me what I thought of their case, and I would keep reassuring them they’d be out soon. That simple fact made them so happy.” The Shindes were acquitted in 2019 following a strongly worded Supreme Court judgment. Among them, Ankush Maruti Shinde, was only 17, a minor, at the time of his arrest. 

Experienced sustained physical torture

Siddiqui says the hope that their innocence would eventually be proven kept them going. “We too survived prison life on that one hope. After all, how long could justice evade us?” he asks.

Siddiqui experienced both extremes of prison life: sustained physical torture in Mumbai’s Arthur Road Jail (complaints about which led to the transfer of the then-jail superintendent, Swati Sathe) and a relatively calmer existence with better food and living conditions in Nagpur. “I’m not romanticising prison life, but Nagpur’s prison was certainly a lot better. Which also means prisons can be made liveable if one wished,” he says.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

But his co-defendant Kamal Ansari’s death during the second wave of the COVID-19 outbreak in 2021 shook him. “Everyone around us was falling sick. Kamal fell sick and was moved to the hospital ward. He never returned.”

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

Siddiqui says most of the men implicated in the case were unknown to him at the time of arrest. “But as circumstances brought us together, we eventually became each others’ support system,” he adds. The police and jail officials, he claims, tried hard to turn them against each other. “And the frustration does eventually get to you. So, each time we reached a point of anger or frustration against each other, we would simply stop talking. That helped us cool off, and rework on our relationship,” he shares.  

Ehtesham Qutubuddin Siddiqui with his father at their family house in Jaunpur. Photo: By arrangement

In Nagpur, Siddiqui had no trouble accessing writing materials. So he wrote extensively. His book, Horror Saga, which details his prison life and the botched up trial, was published last year. He has a manuscript ready for his next book. He has also translated several others while incarcerated.

How did he access books and research materials in jail? “I deviced a unique method,” he says, with a sense of pride. Siddiqui filed nearly 6,000 Right to Information (RTI) applications over two decades, primarily to gather evidence against the investigating agency, which helped debunk the police’s case, and also to access books published by the government press.

Earned over 20 degrees while in prison

A college dropout at the time of his arrest, Siddiqui has since earned over 20 degrees, including several Master’s, Bachelor’s, and Diplomas. In 2001, while in his third year of a Chemical Engineering program, he was arrested for a few days for alleged involvement with the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), an organisation banned that year, leading to the overnight criminalisation of many men from the Muslim community.

Since then, Siddiqui says he tried several times to complete his education and earn a formal degree, but it didn’t happen. “So, in jail, I made full use of the time to gain as many degrees as I could,” he shares.

As strange as it may sound, among the first undergraduate degrees that Siddiqui enrolled himself was Tourism. “I wanted to keep my brain stimulated somehow and not let the incarceration consume me. So, I went on this rage of enrolling myself for every opportunity that was made available,” he recalls. He knew how to read Urdu, Arabic but didn’t possess a formal degree.

“So, I got one while in jail.” Siddiqui, who worked as a Desktop Publishing (DTP) operator as a local publishing house in Mumbai, now holds an MBA degree, master’s degrees in English Literature, Sociology, Marketing, and Financial Management, and diplomas in Nutrition and Mass Communication, among others. He is in the final semester of a three-year law degree.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

If not studying, Siddiqui would take care of the small garden outside the barrack. “Those plants were the only pretty thing to look at,” Siddiqui laughs. The prison rules don’t allow assignment of any work to a death row convict. Which means, even though Siddiqui worked, he was not paid for his labour.

According to the Maharashtra state’s revised prison rules, a convicted prisoner is paid up to Rs. 65 per day, although a paltry sum and much lower than the minimum wages standards, yet some money that most incarcerated people look forward to to lead a dignified life in jail or to take back home at the end of their jail term.

Having spent nearly two decades in different prisons of Maharashtra, Siddiqui says the level of surveillance is “simply unnerving” now. “You will find hundreds of cameras loom overhead. Even a slight movement for exercise inside your barrack is instantly tracked, and jail officials confront you with a barrage of questions,’ he says.” Surveillance doesn’t stop here.

Abdul Wahid Shaikh, one of 13 arrested in this case and acquitted in 2015, and several other terror accused have had to install multiple CCTVs inside and outside their homes to simply shield themselves from police harassment.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

‘Since release, every experience feels new’

On July 21, when the high court acquitted the 12 men, their release orders were  immediately executed – an unusual move. In many cases, even after the court order reaches jail authorities, releases are delayed, just to allow the state to file an appeal in the higher court. “Maybe they just wanted us out. The Solicitor General of India, Tushar Mehta, stating before the Supreme Court that the state no longer wanted us in jail is quite telling,” Siddiqui points out.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

Since his release, every experience feels “new,” Siddiqui says. He and his co-defendant, Shaikh Mohammed Ali Alam Shaikh, boarded a flight from Nagpur to Mumbai. “Hairaan kar diya Mohammed Ali ne (Mohammed Ali exhausted me),” he laughingly shares, as he narrates the experience of tasting freedom for the first time in two decades. “He was so excited he simply couldn’t stop talking. I worried his chatter would draw attention. I told him, ‘Bhai, agle ek ghanta shaant rehna (Brother, stay calm for the next hour).”

At Mumbai airport, they were met by a media frenzy. “We didn’t know how to handle this sudden attention; the last time we experienced anything like this was two decades ago at the time of our arrest,” Siddiqui says. In Mumbai, they had the chance to take a train to reach the Jamiat Ulema-i-Hind (an organisation that provided legal aid to the men all along) office but chose not to. When asked why, Siddiqui pauses but says nothing.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

At the time of his arrest, Siddiqui lived in Mira Road, but he now stays with his family in Younuspur, Jaunpur district, Uttar Pradesh, where his parents, four siblings, and, most importantly, his wife, Sabina, reside. Siddiqui and Sabina were married for less than a year at the time of his arrest in 2006. Siddiqui was only 23 at the time of his arrest, Sabina even younger. 

‘She stood by me, and my parents cared for her as their own’

“In those 19 years, I must have told her many times this could be an endless wait and that I wouldn’t hold it against her if she sought a divorce. But she was steadfast. She stood by me, and my parents cared for her as their own,” Siddiqui says. He calls Sabina the “real hero” of his story. “Her resilience and trust in me was so deep.I can’t express my gratitude enough,” he tells The Wire.

Returning to Younuspur was an emotional homecoming. “When I got home, we just cried. We barely talked; we just cried for many hours.” Relatives and well-wishers have been visiting non-stop. “I don’t recall most faces, but it would be rude to say so, so I simply nod. When I was behind bars, these individuals offered support and solidarity to my family. Now they are here again to celebrate my freedom. It’s all too surreal,” he says.

Siddiqui might have returned with close to two dozen degrees, but the future still looks “uncertain,” he admits. “Finding a job might not be possible. Maybe I will consider pursuing a legal profession,” he thinks aloud. But for now, he says he wants to just return to writing those many stories he has. “The ones I’ve safely kept locked inside me for so many years.”

source: http://www.thewire.in / The Wire / Home> English>Rights / by Sukanya Shantha / July 27th, 2025

Obituary : Hamidullah Sharif

Guntur District, ANDHRA PRADESH :

Hamidullah Shariff who translated the Qur’an into Telugu in 1985 died recently in his home town in a village in Guntur district of Andhra Pradesh.

Hamidullah Sharif is well versed in Arabic, Persian, Urdu, Telugu and English languages and is considered a scholar particularly of Arabic, Urdu and Telugu.

The Telugu translation of Qur’an is named or titled Divya Qur’an.

He was also a member of Andhra Pradesh’s Jamat-e Islami Hind Majlis-e Shoora.  

source: http://www.milligazette.com / The Milli Gazette / Home> Community News> Obituaries / May 02nd, 2026  

Asaduddin Owaisi’s door-to-door campaign helps AIMIM secure 114 seats in Maharashtra civic polls

TELANGANA / MAHARASHTRA :

The AIMIM won 33 seats in Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, 21 in Malegaon, 15 in Amravati, 13 in Nanded, 10 in Dhule, eight in Solapur, six in Mumbai, five in Thane, two in Jalgaon, and one in Chandrapur.

Asaduddin Owaisi / PTI

Asaduddin Owaisi’s door-to-door campaign and the sting of narrow defeats in previous polls energized the workers of All India Majlis E Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) in the Maharashtra civic elections, resulting in the party winning 114 seats across the state, its leader Shareque Naqshbandi said on Friday.

The AIMIM won 33 seats in Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, 21 in Malegaon, 15 in Amravati, 13 in Nanded, 10 in Dhule, eight in Solapur, six in Mumbai, five in Thane, two in Jalgaon, and one in Chandrapur.

Winning 80 seats in earlier civic polls gave the party an idea of the temperament of the urban voter, which also helped, Naqshbandi told PTI.

“Initially, AIMIM faced a challenge from its own people over candidature in Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar. Later, the presence of Asaduddin Owaisi and his rallies in potent pockets resulted in AIMIM winning 33 out of 37 seats we contested here. We have bagged wins from Mumbai to Chandrapur this time,” he said.

Owaisi dedicated more time to the campaign compared to 2015 and managed to overcome dissidence by speaking to disgruntled leaders and convincing nearly 70 percent of them, Naqshbandi said.

“The rest had already moved ahead by joining other political parties. We brought these people together and this got converted into votes. There were divisions among the opposition parties, which proved to be an opportunity to us. Moreover Asaduddin Owaisi went door to door in the areas where we were contesting. He pointed out local civic issues in smaller rallies which appealed to the voter,” he added.

Narrow losses, like the one faced by Imtiaz Jaleel in the 2024 assembly elections from Aurangabad East, had hurt workers who put in extra efforts, Naqshbandi said.

Speaking on the Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar civic poll results, former MP Jaleel said the BJP was fighting with the aim of ending the Shiv Sena here.

“The BJP had money and resources but they had a target to end Shiv Sena led by Eknath Shinde. They severed the alliance at the last moment and achieved their target. Now Shiv Sena is behind us here. They have 4-5 MLAs, one MP and a minister here. But they could do nothing and people have answered them through votes,” he told reporters.

The people of the city have stood with AIMIM for the past 12 years, resulting in 33 wins, Jaleel added.

“We are the second biggest party in the city after BJP. We have given candidature to the ordinary people here and they have won here. This is a tight slap to those political parties who gave candidature to their relatives. While the opposition called AIMIM communal, we made people from the Hindu community win seats,” he said.

source: http://www.telegraphonline.com / The Telegraph Online / Home> India / by The Telegraph Online Web Desk & PTI / January 16th, 2026

2.5 lakh girls to get Azim Premji Foundation scholarship

Bengaluru, KARNATAKA / INDIA :

Anurag Behar

The Azim Premji Foundation on Thursday announced the Azim Premji Scholarship for up to 2.5 lakh girl students from government schools across 18 States for pursuing higher education.

A scholarship of ₹30,000 will be given annually to girl students who have passed their 10th and 12th examinations in government schools and have received admission in a bona fide higher education institution (HEI). These bona fide HEIs will include all government HEIs and selective private HEIs as well. The ₹30,000 scholarship will continue for the duration of the girl’s college/university programme, so long as the girl successfully continues in the programme. 

“There is no additional criteria or eligibility for the candidates. We are not conducting any exams or checking the financial backgrounds of the students,” said Anurag Behar, the Chief Executive Officer of the Azim Premji Foundation.

He stated the reason for such a type of screening was that more than 90% of government school children come from disadvantaged backgrounds. The scholarship aims to ease some of the financial burdens of girl students pursuing a higher education, rather than focus on too many checklists or screening processes.

He also noted that while primary school admissions for girls were almost equal to those of boys, higher education admission numbers showed a lesser percentage of girls. “Tuition fees are often waived off or given at a discount for girls from disadvantaged financial backgrounds. But additional expenses like commute, clothes, books etc discourage them from pursuing their higher education,” he explained.

A pilot test of the ‘Azim Premji Scholarship’ was launched in 2024-25 across certain districts of Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, and Jharkhand, where over 25,000 girls were selected for the scholarship. For the academic year of 2025-26, the scholarship has officially been launched across 18 States, some of which include Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Karnataka, Telangana, Tripura, Odisha, and Mizoram.

The application process for 2025-26 will start in September 2025. Students can apply online. The scholarship program is a ₹2,250 crore commitment across three years by the foundation, and is likely to be expanded to cover the entire country in coming years.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by The Hindu Bureau / May 16th, 2025

Bengaluru to get 1,000-bed charitable super-speciality multi-organ transplant hospital; pact inked

Bengaluru, KARNATAKA :

The Foundation has set a target of spending ₹4,000 crore over the next five years to build and operate a 1,000-bed charitable super-speciality and multi-organ transplant hospital in Bengaluru.

Chief Minister Siddaramaiah with Anurag Beharm, CEO, Azim Premji Foundation, at a ceremony in Bengaluru on Saturday. | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said the Azim Premji Foundation has set a target of spending ₹4,000 crore over the next five years to build and operate a new 1,000-bed charitable super-speciality and multi-organ transplant hospital in Bengaluru.

The hospital will come up on 10 acres within the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Chest Diseases campus in Bengaluru, which the government has agreed to lease to the Foundation for 99 years, he announced on Saturday after the Medical Education Department and the Foundation signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for the construction and management of the facility.

Mr. Siddaramaiah said the State was grateful to the Foundation and to Azim Premji ‘for undertaking this noble initiative’, and for deciding to run the facility free of cost. The Foundation will invest ₹1,000 crore on building the hospital and more over the years to run the facility, he said.

Over the last 25 years, the Foundation has supported teacher training, contributed ₹1,500 crore to the government’s egg distribution scheme in schools in 2024, and extended annual scholarships of ₹30,000 each to students from government colleges under the Deepika scheme, the Chief Minister added.

Public systems key

Anurag Behar, CEO, Azim Premji Foundation, emphasised the importance of strengthening public systems, saying private initiatives cannot compensate for weak public infrastructure.

“The foundation believes that public systems are central to a good society. Our commitment is to work with the government to strengthen them,” he said, pointing out that healthcare begins with ASHA workers, primary health centres, and preventive work in communities. “Hospitals are critical, but the first goal must be to prevent people from falling ill,” he said.

Mr. Behar praised Karnataka as ‘one of the three most proactive States’ the Foundation works with. He noted that the Foundation’s 25-year engagement in Karnataka has shown progress most visibly in grassroots work in, among other places, Surpur and Sindagi.

Transplant hub

Medical Education Minister Sharan Prakash R. Patil said the proposed hospital will provide transplant services across multiple organs, with 70% of procedures free of cost and the remaining 30% at minimal rates on the lines of the autonomous Sri Jayadeva Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences and Research and the Kidwai Memorial Institute of Oncology.

He said more than 5,000 patients in Karnataka are currently awaiting kidney transplant, and over 1,000 require liver transplant.

Dr. Patil added that the project aligns with the government’s larger roadmap to strengthen tertiary healthcare. “We have set a target of establishing one medical college, one super-speciality hospital, one trauma centre, and one cancer hospital in every district,” he said.

At present, Karnataka has 22 government medical colleges, 10 super-speciality hospitals, eight trauma centres, and eight cancer centres, and is ‘halfway through’ with the plan. He said the State intends to transition towards a universal health coverage model, as in the UK, in the coming decade.

This article has been updated to rectify a factual error

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> India>Karnataka / by The Hindu Bureau / January 18th, 2026

Al Kareem School excel in zonal tournaments

Mysuru, KARNATAKA :

Throwball team:

Tanziya,  Faqhiya, Aneesa, Tasmiya Fathima, Fathima Zoya,  Sumiya Banu, Zoya Jan, Amreen Taj,  Ameena, Farheen Taj, Aliya Fathima, Zoya Sultana and  Sakeena Hooriya.

Ball Badminton team: 

Shabreen, Hajira, Fathima Zoya, Aliya Fathima, Farheen Taj, Noorain, Anam Fathima,  Sumiya Banu, Tasmiya Fathima, and Tanziya Banu.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Sports / January 13th, 2026

Jamia Hamdard’s Rufaida College of Nursing Hosts Induction Programme for Undergraduate and Postgraduate Batch-2025

DELHI :

New Delhi:

Rufaida College of Nursing, Jamia Hamdard organised its Induction Programme for M.Sc. Nursing, B.Sc. (Hons.) Nursing, Post Basic B.Sc. Nursing, and DGNM First-year students on November 24 at the Convention Centre, Jamia Hamdard, New Delhi. A total of 176 students participated in the programme.

The Chief Guest for the programme was Mrs. Bholi Ahluwalia, Chairperson, Indian Spinal Injuries Centre, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi. The Guest of Honour was Dr. Achala, Assistant Director General (Nursing), DGHS, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India.

The inaugural ceremony commenced with the recitation of the Holy Qur’an by Imam Sahib of Rabia Mosque, followed by the Hamdard Tarana presented by the nursing students.

In her welcome address, Prof. Veena Sharma, Dean-cum-Principal, Rufaida College of Nursing, School of Nursing Education & Research, greeted the newly admitted students and paid homage to the university’s founder, Late Hakeem Abdul Hameed. She highlighted the college’s remarkable achievements, strong national ranking, and consistent 100% placement record. She encouraged students to make full use of academic and professional opportunities available at Jamia Hamdard.

In her address, Mrs. Ahluwalia praised the students for choosing a profession rooted in service and emphasised the vital, compassionate role nurses play in healthcare.

Dr. Achala congratulated the new batch and described the induction as the beginning of a transformative journey. She urged students to remain engaged academically and participate actively in extracurricular activities.

In his presidential address, Prof. (Dr.) M. Afshar Alam, Vice Chancellor, Jamia Hamdard, welcomed the students to the NAAC “A+” accredited university. He highlighted the rigorous curriculum and dedicated faculty at Rufaida College of Nursing, reminding students that university life fosters critical thinking, compassion, discipline, and leadership.

The programme concluded with a vote of thanks delivered by Ms. Jamal Fatima Hashmi, Assistant Professor, followed by the national anthem.

source: http://www.radiancenews.com / Radiance News / Home> Education> Latest News / by Radiance News Bureau / November 24th, 2025

FMEI Bengaluru School Leaders Award Conference 2026 Emphasises Collective Strength of Muslim Educational Institutions

Bengaluru, KARNATAKA :

Bengaluru:

The Federation of Minorities Educational Institutions (FMEI), Bangalore Chapter, successfully organised the School Leaders Award Conference 2026 on January 17 at Bearys Suhardha Bhavan here. The conference witnessed the participation of over 150 management leaders and eminent educationists representing Muslim educational institutions across Bengaluru.

The Chief Guest, Mr. Naseer Ahmed, Member of Legislative Council (MLC) and Political Advisor to the Chief Minister of Karnataka, lauded the role of private unaided schools in delivering quality education despite limited resources. He stated that the consistent performance of these institutions reflects their discipline, dedication, and strong educational commitment. Congratulating FMEI, he observed that collective organisation of Muslim educational institutions enhances their political and social influence.

Presiding over the conference, Mr. Syed Tanveer Ahmed, senior educationist, emphasised that a strong collective platform enables Muslim educational institutions to assert their concerns more effectively at policy and governance levels. He urged institutions to rise above sectarian differences and focus on academic excellence, institutional growth, collective welfare, and social responsibility.

Delivering the keynote address, Mr. Muhammad Asifuddin, General Secretary, FMEI Karnataka Chapter, stated that the primary objective of the conference was to recognise and encourage the valuable services of Muslim educational institutions through awards, motivating them towards further progress. On the occasion, school leaders were felicitated with awards presented by the distinguished guests.

A memorandum highlighting key demands was submitted by FMEI through Mr. Naseer Ahmed to the Departments of Education and Minority Welfare. The memorandum included demands such as relaxation in renewal of school recognition, simplification of Minority Status Certificate issuance, enhancement of the Pre-Matric Scholarship budget to over 1000 crore rupees in the 2026–27 financial year, allocation of government land and infrastructure grants for Muslim schools, doubling of budgets for Post-Matric and Overseas Education schemes, and direct online submission of applications for Madrasa Modernisation without intermediaries. Mr. Naseer Ahmed assured that he would take up these issues with the Chief Minister and concerned ministers. The memorandum was also released to the media.

Addressing the gathering, Maulana Dr. Maqsood Imran Rashadi, Imam and Khateeb of City Jamia Masjid, Bengaluru, stressed that Muslim educational institutions must integrate moral and religious education alongside modern academics. Dr. Belgami Mohammed Saad, President, Mansurah Educational and Welfare Trust, highlighted that a holistic institution is one that nurtures knowledge, Islamic values, and character simultaneously.

Dr. Mohammad Taha Mateen, Trustee, Taqwa Educational Trust, underscored the importance of strong collective platforms, noting that FMEI serves as a credible and effective organisation to address educational, social, and policy-related challenges faced by Muslim institutions.

During the academic session, Dr. Benazir delivered an insightful PowerPoint presentation titled “Connecting Schools with the Community,” underlining the crucial role of schools in holistic community development.

Prominent members of the organising committee present included Mr. Iqbal Ahmed (President, FMEI Bengaluru), Mr. Haroon Basha (Secretary, FMEI), Mr. Riyaz Ahmed Ron, Syed Basharat Ahmed, Mr. Aslam Hekkari (Udupi), Maulana Abdul Ghaffar Hamid Umri, Mr. Atiq Pasha H, Mrs. Reshma Iqbal, Syed Ejaz, Syed Munir, Mr. Zulfiqar Ahmed, Dr. Zohaib Javed Khan, Mohammad Altaf Ahmed, and Mr. Iftikhar Sharif, among others.

The programme concluded with a vote of thanks by Dr. Fareeda Rahmatullah, expressing gratitude to the chief guest, dignitaries, delegates, education leaders, media professionals, and participants. The conference strongly reaffirmed that organised educational leadership is vital for social development and effective policy advocacy.

source: http://www.radiancenews.com / Radiance News / Home> Education> Report / by Radiance News Bureau / January 18th, 2026