Tag: India

  • India bans day time advertisement of condoms

    India bans day time advertisement of condoms

    India on Tuesday banned telecast of condom advertisements on TV during day time, a move that has invited fierce criticism from campaigners of safe sex.

    In an advisory, India’s Information and Broadcasting Ministry has asked all TV channels in this country not to air condom advertisements between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. local time to avoid exposure of such material to children.

    “It has been brought to the notice of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting that some channels carry advertisements of condoms repeatedly which are alleged to be indecent especially for children.

    “In view of the above, all TV channels are hereby advised not to telecast the advertisements of condoms which are for a particular age group and could be indecent/ inappropriate for viewing by children,” the ministry added.

    The ministry has said the condom advertisements should only be aired late night till early morning, and asked TV channels to ensure strict adherence to the provisions of Cable Television Networks Rules.

    The ministry has also warned of action against any TV channel found flouting its order, which comes in the wake of a plea by the Advertising Standards Council of India ( ASCI ) earlier this month to decide the telecast timing of such advertisements.

    “The ministry has taken a call on our request. ASCI had received several complaints on the content of condom advertisments… (which) were explicit for children.

    “The main issue was with the timing of the advertisements,” Shweta Purandare, secretary general of ASCI, told the media.

    Doctors and critics, however, came down heavily on the government’s restrictions on telecast of such advertisements, saying such a move will prove counterproductive for campaigns against unwanted pregnancies, unsafe abortions and unsafe sex.

    Read also: Can you buy condoms for your partner?

    “Sex education in schools may not be enough for teenagers. Good condom advertisements can help curb unwanted pregnancies, which are on the rise among teens, by giving the right message.

    “I think it’s a wrong step by the government,” Dr. Gauri Kaushik, a gynacologist, said Tuesday.

    Poonam Mutreja, executive director of non-governmental body, Population Foundation of India, echoed similar sentiments.

    “There are 13 per cent unwanted pregnancies in India, there are nearly 15 million abortions.

    “This decision is a red flag for me,” she told the media.

    NAN

  • ‘I need N4m for hip surgery in India’ 

    A 32-year-old man, Okpiden Obas, has called on federal and Delta State governments, including rich individuals, to help him raise N4 million for a hip surgery in India.

    Obas was involved in the March boat accident on Escravos waterways in Warri South West Local Government Area, in which nine persons died.

    He sells clothes and shoes, but now could hardly move or bend.

    Obas wife and family have abandoned him, and he has been ejected from his apartment.

    He said: “It was discovered at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) that I have bilateral femoral heads avascular necrosis and bilateral hip joint osteoarthritis changes in my body.

    “It was a Chinese man, married to a Benin lady, who paid my bill of N150,000 before I was discharged from UBTH. The man came to see his wife when he took pity on me and helped.

    “My wife ran away and my family abandoned me. I have been sleeping inside keke in the last three weeks since I returned from UBTH. I also sleep inside stores and if civil defence officers see me, I explain to them.

    “I have also slept in barbers’ shops before I started sleeping in a church on Bright Hope Street.”

    According to a Consultant Radiologist/Sinologist, Dr. Onyemesili J. C., Obas’ condition (bilateral femoral heads avascular necrosis and bilateral hip joint osteoarthritis) is gradually deteriorating, due to his inability to continue his N20,000 weekly medication at UBTH.

    Donations can be made to Fidelity Bank Plc, Okpiden Obas, 6012901716.

  • India fines Nestle $96,500 over ‘substandard’ Maggi noodles

    India fines Nestle $96,500 over ‘substandard’ Maggi noodles

    Authorities in northern India have fined Swiss food giant Nestle 96,500 dollars, after food inspectors found contamination in samples of its popular Maggi noodles, two years after the controversy first surfaced.

    Uttar Pradesh state’s Shahjahanpur district fined the Swiss firm 4.5 million rupees and its distributors 1.7 million rupees, taking the total penalty to 6.2 million rupees (96,500 dollars).

    “Food quality tests on Maggi samples found the product to be substandard.

    “The ash content, which include heavy metals, found in the samples were above permissible limits for human consumption,” district food quality chief DP Singh told dpa by phone.

    The samples were collected during raids on various distributors in 2015.

    The fine was only imposed two years later after authorities had heard detailed representations from Nestle and its distributors, Singh said.

    A spokesman for Nestle India asserted that Maggi noodles were “100 per cent safe” for consumption.

    Nestle said it appeared to be a case of “application of incorrect standards” and it would appeal against the order.

    Maggi noodles was banned in June 2015 for six months after India’s food regulator said the product was “unsafe and hazardous” levels of lead.

    Production began after the ban was relaxed later that year.

    Singh said while the 2015 ban was because of high levels of lead, the penalty was because of elevated levels of ash content.

    The yellow-and-red packages of Maggi noodles are a popular snack in India and can be found in shops in the furthest reaches of the country.

    NAN

  • Mealtimes are becoming a Family Affair in India ’s Desert State

    Mealtimes are becoming a Family Affair in India ’s Desert State

    India ’s mothers are among the most malnourished in the world, but a project empowering women and fighting harmful traditions gives hope for a solution.

    Mohammed Iqbal for The Hindu

    In a small village tucked away near the Rajasthan-Gujarat border, wafts of spice once filled the air as 40-year-old Dubali Damor warmed chapatis and fried spices for her family’s evening meal. Once ready, her husband and children would tuck into plates of steaming fluffy rice and curry whilst she scuttled away into the corner to wait for them to finish. With any luck there would be something left for her to pick at before bedtime.

    In Rajasthan, a state hit hardly by climate change and difficult farming conditions, the harmful practice of women like Dubali eating after their husbands and families is a public health issue that must end. According to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) one billion people worldwide suffer from malnutrition, with women being the most impacted. In fact, figures show that in India alone 55 percent of women are anaemic and that one in three women of childbearing age is undernourished, with a body index mass (BMI) of less than 18.5kg/m2. Unsurprisingly, female undernourishment can perpetuate an intergenerational cycle of health problems as poorly nourished mothers themselves lack vital nutrients for the development of their unborn babies and are unable to produce nutritious breast milk.

    Luckily, Freedom from Hunger India Trust has put into practice a two-year project to tackle the issue of female malnourishment in the region, honing in on the Banswara and Sirohi districts within the state. Implemented in 2015, The Rajasthan Nutrition Project works to educate communities on the importance of ensuring adequate nutrition amongst women, and offers training programmes in agriculture and health. Empowering women to initiate change within their communities, local women are trained to work as nutritional advocates, forming a dedicated network of Annapurnas (gods of food). So far over 1,250 women have been trained directly by The Rajasthan Nutrition Project, who have in turn offered nutritional guidance to a further 8,100 women on. In total, the Annapurnas have spread their message to more than 30,000 individuals across the Banswara and Sirohi regions of Rajasthan.

    Surveys carried out show that the seeds sown by the Annapurnas are reaping real results; in rural communities, where patriarchal attitudes run deep, male family members are slowly understanding that when women’s health is made a public priority the entire community benefits. In tribal villages involving men in educational programmes has resulted in families evolving new strategies to source low-cost nutritious food and has overturned the harmful practice of women eating after male family members.

    Annapurna (a health activist) during awareness programme under Rajasthan Nutrition project by Vaagdhara NGO aimed to overcome under-nourished women and childrens and inequality in village Jalimpura,block Sajjangarh, in District Banswara, Rajasthan. Women of this south Rajasthan village sat down to eat, it was usually after the rest of the family had finished its meal. Photo Sandeep Saxena

    Varsha Joshi, an associate professor at the Institute of Development Studies in Jaipur, argues that taking on such innocuous traditions as the simple act of mothers eating separately from their families is key to securing equal rights for women. He commented that when women eat with their families and understand the vital link between food consumption and nutrition, the health of the entire family improves.
    Dubali was one of the local women the Annapurnas reached out to. Eating after her family had left her weak and exhausted. “It was a habit for us. I never thought of it as discrimination against women, although I remained hungry several times and my health suffered,” Dubali said. Despite owning and working land, she lacked any real nutritional knowledge and often only cooked two or three types of vegetable throughout the week. Under the guidance of local Annapurna Shobha Rawat, Dubali and several other women from her village of Jalimpura learnt about the relationship between health and food. Women are taught a few basic cooking techniques such as using iron food vessels for cooking and using mixed grain flours to make chapatis. An impressive 53 percent of female heads of households report being food secure after having undergone the training.

    Women fetching water in Sajjangarh, District Banswara, Rajasthan. Women of this south Rajasthan village sat down to eat, it was usually after the rest of the family had finished its meal With the awareness programme under Rajasthan Nutrition project by Vaagdhara NGO aimed to overcome under-nourished women and childrens and inequality Photo Sandeep Saxena

    In Rajasthan — an area where female illiteracy runs high — Shobha has to think outside of the box to get the Annapurnas’ message across. “One thing that did the trick was a series of pictorial stories comparing two fictional women, Sita and Gita. Women saw who did better with nutritional advice, and were convinced about how to take care of themselves and their children,” she said.

    In many villages the presence of the Annapurnas has seen a flourishing of poshanbadis (home gardens). Now armed with elevated confidence and nutritional know-how, women are opting to grow nutritious crops such as luni (purslane) and pui (malabar spinach) which were once sidelined for wheat. The growing of crops by these local women mark real progress in demolishing the boundaries that traditions had built between women, nutrition and agriculture in the region.

    For Dubali and Shobha mealtimes have come to represent more than just a chance to eat alongside their loved ones, they now offer a chance for them to solidify their place in the local community.

    https://www.freedomfromhunger.org/Rajasthan_Nutrition_Project

  • Violent protests break out at university after student suicide

    Violent protests break out at university after student suicide

    Violent protests broke out at a university in southern India after a student allegedly committed suicide after she was caught cheating in an exam, officials said Thursday.

    Students from Sathyabama University near the city of Chennai torched furniture of their hostels and held noisy protests overnight, footage on news channels showed.

    Protestors said the student was forced to take the extreme step after university staff humiliated her and sent out of the exam hall.

    On Thursday morning, university officials told local media they had shut the campus down and had asked the students to vacate the hostel.

    “The situation is peaceful and under control now,” Chennai police commissioner AK Viswanathan said.

    “The management has declared a holiday for more than a week up to Dec. 3.

    Most of the students have left the campus for their homes,” he said.

    The 18-year-old student hanged herself in her room and her body was body was discovered earlier Wednesday. Demonstrations broke out as the news of her death spread across the campus.

    Viswanathan said armed police had been deployed at the campus to prevent further violence.

    Read Also:  Afe Babalola University goes tough on criminals

  • Police arrest cartoonist for caricature of politicians, officials

    Police arrest cartoonist for caricature of politicians, officials

    Police on Monday arrested a cartoonist in southern India for depicting the region’s top government functionaries in a “derogatory” caricature, sparking criticism over the move as an attack on freedom of the press.

    G Balakrishnan, 36, a freelancer associated with an online news portal, was held in Tamil Nadu state capital Chennai on Sunday for the caricature that blamed chief minister Edappadi Palaniswami and top officials for not acting against loan sharks active in the state.

    Police officer Anita Arokyamery said that he was charged with publishing defamatory and obscene material under the Indian Penal Code as well as the Information Technology Act, crimes punishable with three years in jail.

    “He was produced before a court on Monday which released him on bail.

    “The court told him to make himself available for questioning as and when the police requires,” she added.

    After his release, Balakrishnan told reporters he would continue to highlight the inefficiencies of the government through his work.

    Balakrishnan drew the cartoon after a worker immolated himself and three members of his family in the Tirunelveli district, unable to bear harassment by a money lender who lent him money at a very high interest rate.

    The arrest sparked a controversy after media groups planned a protest in Chennai saying it was an attempt to quash free speech and silence critics.

    India, the world’s largest democracy, is ranked a poor 136th among 180 countries on the 2017 World Press Freedom index.

    There have been questions over press freedom amid the targeting and arrests of journalists in recent months.

    Read Also: Police arraign Jonathan’s nephew for shooting man at festival

  • Facebook investigates temporary outage of WhatsApp messenger

    Facebook investigates temporary outage of WhatsApp messenger

    Facebook Inc’s WhatsApp messenger suffered a temporary outage in India and many other countries, according to reports from multiple users on Facebook and Twitter on Friday.

    Users in countries ranging from Brazil and Russia to Vietnam and Myanmar reported on social media that it was down in their countries.

    The extent of the outage and the reasons for it were not immediately known.

    ‘Whatsappdown’ was the top trending item on Twitter in India, which is WhatsApp’s biggest market with about 200 million of its billion-plus users.

    It was also a top trending item on Twitter in Pakistan, Britain, Germany and many other countries.

    Users reported WhatsApp, the world’s most popular messaging service, had begun to gradually function again about 30 minutes after initial complaints of an outage appeared on social media.

    Users in Malaysia and Singapore also complained of WhatsApp being down in those countries.

    A spokeswoman for Facebook in Singapore said the company was still investigating the matter.

    Independent websites monitoring outages of popular social media services via online conversations and Twitter messages report regular outages for WhatsApp, often one every few weeks, but these are typically brief and confined to certain geographies.

    WhatsApp has faced similar widespread outages this year, including for several hours in May.

    WhatsApp is used by more than 1.2 billion people around the world and is a key tool for communications and commerce in many countries.

    The service was acquired by Facebook in 2014 for 19 billion dollars.

    NAN

  • Man burnt alive for protesting daughter’s harassment

    Man burnt alive for protesting daughter’s harassment

    The police said that an Indian man who tried to protect his daughter from sexual harassment and complained to authorities has been burnt alive.

    Police officer RA Pandey said that Narmada Sahu, 45, died at a hospital in Madhya Pradesh state late on Sunday.

    Pandev said that the victim’s relatives alleged that his 16-year-old daughter was routinely harassed by a neighbour and that Sahu complained to police in August.

    He said the neighbour demanded that Sahu withdraw the complaint.

    Police said on Sunday the neighbour barged into the victim’s house with two friends, poured kerosene on him and sett him on fire.

    “We have arrested the three attackers, lodged a criminal case and launched investigations,” Pandey said.

    Sexual violence has been a focus of public attention in India since the gang-rape and murder of a student in New Delhi in 2012.

    Read Also : Sexual harassment: Varsity lecturers risk five year jail term

  • Nigeria rated 5th in  highest pollution, mortality deaths

    Nigeria rated 5th in highest pollution, mortality deaths

    With  257,093 cases, Nigeria has been rated 5th country with the highest pollution and mortality deaths across the globe in one year.

    Increasing pollution is said to be proving deadlier than war, natural disasters or smoking, having been responsible for at least 9 million premature deaths.

    A new report published in the Lancet medical journal puts India at No1 with 2,515,518 (24.5 percent), China at No.2 with  1,838,251 (19.5 percent),followed by Pakistan with  311,189 deaths  (21.9 percent).

    Bangladesh is in the 4th position with 260,836 deaths (26.6 percent).

    The report is based  largely on 2015 data from the Global Burden of Disease.

    Others on the list are:Indonesia: 211,896 (13.5 percent);Russia: 172,536 (8.6 percent);

    United States: 155,155 (5.7 percent); Ethiopia: 129,450 (19.1 percent);and Democratic Republic of the Congo: 123,942 (18 percent).

    While the highest death tolls were reported mostly in Asia, the highest rates of pollution-related mortality were seen in Africa.

    Here are the countries with the highest number of pollution-related deaths and the highest pollution-related mortality rates.

    10 HIGHEST RATES OF POLLUTION-RELATED DEATHS PER 100,000 POPULATION (PERCENT OF ALL DEATHS)

    Somalia: 316.3 (26.5 percent)

    Central African Republic: 303.8 (18.9 percent)

    Chad: 284.9 (25.6 percent)

    South Sudan: 264.2 (23.2 percent)

    Niger: 245.5 (24.9 percent)

    Guinea-Bissau: 238.9 (20.1 percent)

    Lesotho: 226.8 (13.0 percent)

    Afghanistan: 211.7 (18.7 percent)

    India: 196.2 (24.5 percent)

    Burundi: 178.7 (20.4 percent)

  • England won’t win in Russia and must improve – Shearer

    England won’t win in Russia and must improve – Shearer

    England’s senior side is not yet of a standard to be a serious title contender at next year’s FIFA World Cup, former striker Alan Shearer says.

    Shearer said on Monday that in spite of its age-group teams dazzling on the global stage at various youth tournaments in 2017, England may not be favourites at Russia 2018.

    Gareth Southgate’s side went unbeaten in their qualifying campaign for Russia but has been criticised for lacking a creative spark.

    It has scored only 18 goals in 10 games in a group containing lowly-ranked Lithuania and Lithuania

    “I don’t expect us to win the World Cup in Russia next year, even with the success of our teams underneath that level, be it the under-21s, the under-19s or the under-17s,” Shearer said in an interview from Bengaluru.

    “I don’t see us going to Russia and winning the tournament. No.”

    England’s recent record at the quadrennial showpiece event has not been inspiring.

    The 1966 champions, who reached the quarter-finals in 2002 and 2006, exited at the round of 16 stage in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

    Their worst performance came at the last edition in Brazil when they failed to get past the group stage.

    The Euro 2016 exit at the round of 16 stage after defeat to Iceland left little optimism among England’s supporters.

    Shearer, who was in India for a Premier League fan park event where roughly 40,000 spectators watched the top matches of the weekend on a giant screen, thinks that will prove to be a nadir.

    “What I would expect is to see an improvement on what we saw in France in the European Championships 18 months ago,” said Shearer, who scored 30 goals in 63 appearances for England.

    “It shouldn’t be too difficult to improve on that when you consider the performance we had in the game against Iceland when we were knocked out of the tournament.

    “Very much similar to other campaigns when we had results in the qualifiers. We are there now but we have to go one step further and we have to show improvement.”

    In stark contrast to the national side, the England Under-20s won the World Cup in South Korea in June before their Under-19 team became European champions in Georgia the following month.

    The young Lions have also won the Toulon Tournament this year and are through to the last 16 of the ongoing Under-17 World Cup in India.

    Shearer, who scored twice in four appearances at the 1998 World Cup finals in France, suggested one of the reasons why England were unsuccessful at the top level.

    He said it was because young English players are not playing in the Premier League.

    “Part of the problem is lot of these boys in the league teams with England are not getting the chance to play at the club level,” Shearer said.

    “Clubs like Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea and Arsenal tend to spend big on foreign players who the managers or the clubs feel are pretty much guaranteed for success.
    “It’s difficult for these managers as they have to deliver success tomorrow.

    “To put in a young player, he needs time to settle and feel his way into the Premier League and clubs are not prepared to do that.”

    Shearer has, however, backed former team mate Southgate to succeed as the national team manager.

    “I am pleased that we were able to give an English player, an young English coach the opportunity to try and do it at that level,” Shearer said.

    “More often than not over the past years we have gone and spent big on foreign managers and they haven’t proved successful at all.

    “I am pleased we have given the job to an English guy who has played in tournaments.

    “I have played with Gareth in tournaments also, so he is aware what tournament football is about and what you need to try and do to get to the latter stages. Hopefully that will stand him in good stead.

    NAN