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Filmmaker Jayan K Cherian; stills from his latest film 'Rhythm of Dammam', on the Siddi Community of Yellapur in Uttara Kannada (north Karnataka). The stunningly shot and evocative Rhythm of Dammam, in Siddi Bhasha, is the first fictional feature ever to be made on the Indian Siddi community that traces its ancestry to Africa. In the film, the pre-teen Jayaram, who lives in Karnataka's Yellapura, is afflicted by his dead grandfather's visions, as his impoverished family fights over supposed buried treasure. But Jayaram is a chosen one, the visitations will lead him to discover his community's origin and sea-bound journey to India centuries ago, as slaves, and their continued oppression by upper-caste landowners. Born in small-town Kerala, New York-based filmmaker Jayan K Cherian's first brush with race happened in the US where he went for higher studies. "All of a sudden, in America, I became a nigger, a black man, an accented Indian, a brown-skin guy. White people -- albeit not all -- have their prejudices and stereotypes, they put you in a bracket of what you look like. And it is cyclical. In 1555, the Roman Catholic Church burned the epics of the Aztecs and started the Mexican Inquisition, some years later, the Portuguese started the Inquisition in Goa, ruled by Bishop Menezes, this is recent history. Xenophobia is always present, in all communities and across classes. And we [Indians] have our own baggage, too. When I'd talk about racism, oppression, xenophobia, homophobia and gender oppression, my White friends would interject: 'You people are caste oppressors'," says the 58-year-old filmmaker whose latest film Rhythm of Dammam premiered at the just-concluded 55th International Film Festival of India (IFFI), Goa, and is one of the only two Indian films in the International competition segment of the 29th International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK), from December 13-20. In the first segment of a two-part interview, Cherian, who stayed with the community in Yellapur over five years since 2016-17, talks about the Siddi community and the making of the film. Edited excerpts: A still from 'Rhythm Of Dammam'. Did your own brushes with racism in the US trigger an ethnological interest in race and in training the lens on the group of African Indians -- the Siddi community? During college in America, and in New York City, I've been watching the Black Power movement, following African literature, from Amiri Baraka to Maya Angelou, and different social, literary and poetic movements. At the time, I was interested in Indian people who came from Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana and Suriname. Their forefathers were indentured servants in indigo plantations and opium factories, who were brought by the British. You can see that people's flow in Amitav Ghosh's book (Sea of Poppies, 2008). The indentured servants flow to Africa, Europe and Latin America. But that is not really migration. That is human trafficking. Most of these Hindu workers were offered jobs in Kolkata and put in ships that landed in Latin America. That started in 1835, during the time, the British queen was banning slavery in the colonies. So, they wanted to replace the slaves with indentured servants. The French were the first to draft a treaty (French Treaty of Commerce of 1860). But even when the British abolished slavery in 1835, slave trade continued in Portuguese Goa and ended there only in 1865. I stumbled upon an article in the British Library on the huge slave flow from Africa to India. The Siddi community [descendants of the Bantu tribe of East Africa] is spread all over Asia: India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and more. The Siddi community in Pakistan are Islamised and dissolved into the population. But in India, there's a huge, solid and layered history, as there's different levels of African presence. Tell us more... In Deccan, for more than 600 years, the dominant power was [wielded by] African mercenaries, they are called the Moors [North African Muslims]. They were the kings and generals. In north India, Razia Sultan's trusted soldier was Jamal-ud-din Yaqut, who was African [an Abyssinian slave]. Later, in the 1500s, a dominant, colossal figure in Deccan was Malik Ambar [served as Peshwa of Ahmadnagar], who was born in Ethiopia, with the name Chapu. He was sold as a little boy in a slave market in Baghdad and was bought by a Gujarati merchant and brought to Ahmadnagar. A brilliant warrior, who became the army chief, he defeated the Mughals and Jahangir hated him. The Hyderabad Nizam have Siddi warriors recruited into his force. That is different kind of Siddis. Then we come to the Siddis [in the Konkan region], the chattel slaves bought from the nomadic Bantu tribes of Africa. They were captured by Arab slave catchers, brought to Mozambique port and exported through the Spaniard and Portuguese ships. Most of the Portuguese ships would anchor in Goa. The captain of the ship, an Arab, was named Syed [meaning noble man/master]. And the root for the word Siddi comes from the word Syedi, meaning the property of Syed. In Pakistan, they are called Sheedi. A still from 'Rhythm Of Dammam'. So, the Siddis in the Konkan belt are former slaves? Slavery continued in Portuguese Goa, as the rich native landlords brought them as manual labours, to work the fields, but also as entertainers, musicians, and sexual objects. There is a very interesting study about the Yellapura [in Karnataka] area. Around 46 per cent of genetic pool (converted within two-three generations) comes from the Brahmin landlords, for over 150 years. This is a crazy number. There are different Siddi groups in India. Gujarati Siddis are predominantly Muslim Siddis. They have a greater connection to Africa because of trade relations and speak a Gujarati creole, but are still marginalised in the Gir forest. In Uttara Kannada (north Karnataka), there's a peculiar history. In the 1840s, the Portuguese Goan Catholics started court of inquisitions. The Goan inquisition forced local landlords, majorly Brahmins, to convert to Christianity or give up their properties (including slaves). The missionary Francis Xavier, who despised Hindu religion and called it pagan practice, aggressively converted a lot of poor fishermen. The inquisitors would monitor if anyone practised Hindu rites, they would trial and burn them. That's why the Gowda Saraswat Brahmins ran away to Mangalore (Karnataka) and Cochin (Kerala). A lot of slaves, too, escaped to the Konkan forests. In the next wave, the great plague of Goa [Chorão Epidemic] meant a lot of slave dens were unattended, so more slaves escaped into the forests. In 1865, when the King of Portugal officially banned slavery, the remaining liberated slaves joined the others in the Konkan forest and started their own communes, tamed the wild and cultivated their own food, like in Brazil or the Maroons (African descendants) in the swamps of North Carolina. The Uttara Kannada district landlords, the Brahmin Hegde and Hebbar, got them to clear the forest land and make it arable, thereby re-enslaving them, with intergenerational debts, like farmers anywhere else in India. All the sugarcane and areca plantations in the Konkan belt owned by Brahmins have been cleared/cultivated by the Siddis. In that process, these former slaves were converted as Hindu. They are a very unique population. Hindu Siddis are found only in the Konkan region, nowhere else in the world. The former slaves imitated the Brahmins [Bhat/Bhatt] and their rituals. The Siddis adopted Hindu names like: Jairam, Yashoda, Ganapati. Slaves who worked for Christian landlords were converted to Christianity. Chattel slaves were bought by Bijapur Sultan, too, and converted into Muslims. You will find them all in the Konkan region and in the same families, there will be a Christian, a Hindu and a Muslim member. My Siddi friend's great grandfather was originally Qasim who was bought and sold in Goa to the Portuguese who changed his name to Bastu (Portuguese for Sebastian) and, later, his Brahmin landlord renamed him as Ganapati. Among the Siddis, the Hindu Siddi community is the most backward. The church helps the Christian Siddis to access education and jobs. The first Hindu Siddi to have graduated from the community is Shantaram Siddi, who's the Karnataka MLC, and he joined the RSS-affiliated Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram. He makes a cameo in Rhythm of Dammam. The language of the film has both Konkani and Kannada. Is Siddi Bhasha a mix of both? In Yellapur, you can see the people speaking Marathi, Konkani, Siddi Bhasha and several others. There is cultural intersectionality because this place is on the border. And Siddi Bhasha is actually Konkani Kannada with a lot of Sanskrit words in it, because of the Brahmin landlords, since the Hindu Siddis don't have any interaction with outside people. They imitate the Brahmins. Their marriage parties have vegetarian menu and are catered by Brahmins, because the landlords won't eat at their marriage parties if the Siddis cook. And the Brahmins won't sit and eat with the Siddis. They have a special area to eat. A still from 'Rhythm Of Dammam'. The film starts with the grandfather's death, Hindu death rituals like Shraadh and Pitru Aradhana are shown. Like gods, their ancestors are shown to have a special place in their homes. They have a room for their [dead] elders. These ancestors have a continuous presence in their life. For every family decision and event (marriage, funerals), they go talk to them. One person in the family is an oracle, who speaks to the ancestors. That connects them to Bantu people and African tradition. Besides the ancestor worship and the Dammam music, connecting the Siddis to the African Bantus. Their original religion, language and everything taken away from them, they are only left with their music and their Dammam, a small drum. It is this music which brings all Siddis, across religions, to come together, at an annual carnival (in the first week of April), where they jointly worship Siddinaas and dance to the music of Dammam, as if from a muscle memory, an intergenerational memory. This music is used for celebration, mourning, speaking to ancestors, as well as a healing tool. Rhythm of Damam is celebration of their spirit. It was a prolonged sequence in the film, the rituals followed by the dance. Was it an aesthetic call to shoot it in one long take? They start at 6 am and end at 6 am the next day, 24 hours of rituals, and they start to dance by evening until next day morning. That's why the lingering length of that shot [in the film]. The long episodal dance comes in waves, they are in a shamanic trance, going back to their tribal roots. The camera kept rolling, I couldn't cut. It was a challenge to shoot. Two Dammams take place and the entire film is shaped in between the two. One is the barah din or twelfth day ceremony [after the elder's death] and the other is the healing ceremony of the boy Jayaram. That is his initiation, as he puts on the face paint. He rejected this outer world or this conditioning. That is their resistance. A kind of coming-of-age declaration, as he starts to play the Dammam. A still from 'Rhythm Of Dammam'. In his dream, Jayaram sees his now-dead grandfather and ancestors because of the muscle memory that connects the Siddis to their cultural roots in Africa? Yeah. But there is some other psychiatric twist into that. There is an African American psychiatrist by the name Dr Joy DeGruy and she had a diagnosis. She wrote a book called Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome, where she addressed why the males in present-day African American community is drawn to more criminality, addiction and laziness, and all kind of traumatic symptoms. She found this psychiatric disorder as a syndrome stemming from the intergenerational slave trauma. I drew that material from her work and uses it as a tool to tell the past of the boy. The boy grows out of his innocence, talks about his African past with pride, the magical elements from the grandfather, his uncle mentions a black panther god and the Bantu chief in Africa. But his cousin, who's a rapper and is quite profane, debunks these stories to tell the boy that, 'We [the later descendants] are just slaves. [Our forefathers] were put on a boat and sold in the market.' That's the trigger for Jayaram, who looks at the murals and pictures of slavery [mounted on the wall of the uncle's house]. This kind of dissonance creates some kind of psychiatric effect on him. The visions, delusions and flashbacks he gets of his dead grandfather is a muscle memory. Delusion is part of the psychosis. Post-traumatic slave syndrome is a real diagnosis. I use it as a storytelling vehicle to connect all these things in my film. Tell us about the cast. Are they all non-actors? The old man, the grandfather figure, Parasuram Siddi, is around 80 years old. He was one of the pioneer theatre persons from that community. And his two daughters are professional actors. One is Girija Siddi, who went to NSD (National School of Drama), where she teaches. She plays Jayaram's mother in the film. Prashant Siddi, the father of the boy, is a prominent Kannada actor. He's done more than 50 films. The Havyaka Brahmin landlord, KG Krishnamurthy, is also a prominent Kannada actor. But majority of the people are non-professional actors. However, every Siddi person has a very high artistic propensity, it's in their blood. A still from 'Rhythm Of Dammam'. Which ethnographic filmmakers have inspired you? Ethnography is an anthropological term, is an orientalist Western word. Many ethnographers study the tribal people. Many documentary films do the same, too. Earlier films like Nanook of the North (1922; world's first documentary film) show the White man exoticising the eskimoes. That is the history of ethnography. So, the word is problematic. I'm just not documenting them like documentaries do. I take a fictional narrative and superimpose on that the cultural and historical aspects, using documentary subjects in a fictional space. My specialty is blurring the borders of the genres. In filmmakers' pantheon, we have gods such as Marcel Duchamp and Maya Deren who, in the 1940s, went to Haiti and spent years to document the Voudoun (or Voodoo) practice, the so-called black magic. That is the subaltern religion, which is oppressed people's religion, which they secretly practise in any former-slave communities. You can see the same in Yellapura, too. In Haiti, all Haitian people, former slaves, are Catholics. But behind the Catholic altar they worship the Virgin Mary, behind that there's a voodoo deity. People wrongly think voodoo is black magic. It is actually a fallen religion. It is an ancient African nature worship. Often the masters/oppressors (White men) are afraid of voodoo because they think these people practise it to kill the masters. That's what they fear. You aren't a Dalit but you made Papilio Buddha (2013), you aren't a Siddi either. How do you respond to cultural appropriation? As a filmmaker, I perceive film as a fine art and it is my primary medium of expression. When I'm telling a story, like in Rhythm of Dammam, it is not Siddi people's authentic story because I'm not Siddi but this is my representation of their reality and this is my story. I'm a diasporic person, and like Jayaram, in a certain sense, I'm displaced, too, albeit a privileged or willing displacement, but the Siddis exercise agency, too, through their rituals and the carnival -- it is the carnivalesque, borrowing (Russian literary critic-philosopher) Mikhail Bakhtin's coined word (whose playful spirit mocks/subverts authority/power and liberates the assumptions of the dominant). In the film, I try to explore the spirit of the Siddi people, their imaginations and their myth. And I only focus on the intergenerational trauma of the human trafficking [slave trade] that happened centuries ago, and the present-day social, class and caste location of these people. For me, the politics of camera is itself intrinsically ethnographic. You are invading others' privacy. There is an invasion. It is a gun in a way. When we switch on a camera onto other people who become the subject, the camera is going to be the dominant symbol of power. I'm aware of the subject-power relationship very much. I'm looking for a distributor. I want to show this film. This film is my most benign film. I have no explicit content or anything. I love my work to reach people. I'm a very selfish. The only reason I chose to show it here (IFFI, Goa) is because of the Konkan people's proximity to this place. They saw the film for the first time. Next is IFFK. I'm actively looking for the distributors, OTTs, festival circuit and more. So, any distributor wants to have the film, please give my number (smiles).
A question. Which party played identity politics in the 2024 campaign? Donald Trump and the Republicans or Kamala Harris and the Democrats? Left-leaning pundits think they know. Political consultant James Carville blamed Democrats' defeat on their "stupid, Goddamn identitarian mission." CNN anchor and Washington Post columnist Fareed Zakaria argued that one of the big mistakes Harris made was "elevating identity politics." New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd declared that "woke is broke." This one-sided attack on identity politics happens like clockwork when Democrats lose an election, eve ...Read More >
NEW DELHI: Dilip Kumar, the 'Tragedy King' of Indian cinema, continues to be remembered for his unmatched contributions to Bollywood. Born on December 11, 1922, as Muhammad Yusuf Khan in Peshawar, Pakistan, he ruled the silver screen with his impeccable acting skills, emotional depth, and charisma. On the occasion of his birth anniversary, let's take a trip down memory lane to revisit some of the most iconic roles that made Dilip Kumar a cinematic legend, a man who left an indelible mark on Indian cinema. 1. 'Andaz' (1949) In 'Andaz', Dilip Kumar shared the screen with Nargis and Raj Kapoo ...Read More >
A temple locked since 1978 communal riots in Sambhal, Uttar Pradesh, has been reopened by authorities during an anti-encroachment drive. The Bhasma Shankar temple, containing idols of Lord Hanuman and a Shivling, was rediscovered during an electricity theft inspection. This follows recent violence and heightened tensions in the area, including a mosque survey dispute and loudspeaker fine.The Sambhal administration here on Saturday uncovered and reopened a temple, which is said to have been closed ...Read More >
Lucknow, Jan 8 (UNI) Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath on Wednesday said that the belief system of Sanatan Dharma represents the world's oldest culture, standing above comparison with any religion or sect. The CM said, "I inherit a legacy that spans thousands of years, with its cultural and spiritual events equally ancient. The tradition of Sanatan is higher than the sky and beyond comparison." Speaking at the 'Mahakumbh Mahasammelan, he emphasised the profound significance of the Maha Kumbh. He explained that after the Devasura Sangram (the battle between gods and demons), drops of nectar fell ...Read More >
PRAYAGRAJ, India (AP) -- Millions of Hindu devotees, mystics and holy men and women from all across India flocked to the northern city of Prayagraj on Monday to kickstart the Maha Kumbh festival, which is being touted as the world's largest religious gathering. Over about the next six weeks, Hindu pilgrims will gather at the confluence of three sacred rivers -- the Ganges, the Yamuna and the mythical Saraswati -- where they will take part in elaborate rituals, hoping to begin a journey to achieve Hindu philosophy's ultimate goal: the release from the cycle of rebirth. Here's what to know abo ...Read More >

Guwahati, Jun 5 (PTI) The Assam Congress on Thursday demanded a CBI inquiry into alleged illegal stone mining in Karbi Anglong district in violation of a Supreme Court order. Addressing a press conference here, former Rajya Sabha member Ripun Bora also alleged that Karbi Anglong Autonomous Council Chief Executive Member Tuliram Ronghang was allowing illegal activities in the district in nexus with Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma. "Large-scale illegal stone mining is taking place in the hills of Karbi Anglong in violation of the Supreme Court order. The SC had banned mining in and around K ...Read More >

NEW DELHI (AP) -- India will start counting its vast population in a mammoth exercise starting next year. The first census in 16 years will be conducted digitally and include controversial questions about caste for the first time since independence. The Home Ministry announced plans to conduct a two-stage count ending March 1, 2027, in a statement Wednesday night. India's last official census in 2011 counted 1.21 billion people. The country's population is now estimated to be well over 1.4 billion, making it the world's most populous country, according to the U.N.'s Department of Economic an ...Read More >
Hindus and members of other minority groups say they have faced more attacks than ever since an interim government replaced the ousted prime minister, as Islamist groups have become more prominent and demoralized security agencies have left a security vacuum. The government says the threat to Hindus has been exaggerated. Around 91% of Bangladeshs population is Muslim, with Hindus making up almost all of the rest. Officials, witnesses and local media reports said that Krishna Das Prabhu, also known as Chinmoy Krishna Das Brahmachari, was arrested in Dhakas main airport on Monday while traveli ...Read More >
Assam Beef Ban: A political row has erupted over the Assam government's decision to ban the public consumption of beef in the state with the Opposition labelling it "against the right to freedom" while the ruling BJP lauding the state Cabinet's call. Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma had announced on Wednesday that his government has decided to ban the consumption of beef in restaurants, hotels and public places, drawing sharp reactions from the Opposition. Samajwadi Party MP Iqra Hasan ...Read More >
New Delhi, Dec 12 (VOICE) The Supreme Court on Thursday ordered that no fresh suits would be registered under the Places of Worship Act in the country, and in the pending cases, no final or effective orders would be passed till further orders of the Apex Court. A Special Bench headed by CJI Sajiv Khanna asked the Union government to file within four weeks its reply to the clutch of petitions challenging the validity of the 1991 Act, which prohibits the filing of a lawsuit to reclaim a place of worship or seek a change in its character from what prevailed on August 15, 1947. The Bench, also c ...Read More >
New Delhi: As Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi compared the actions of the BJP-led government to the tale of Dronacharya and Eklavya, several religious criticised him and said the Congress leader was a 'Rashtra Virodhi' (anti-national) and 'Hindu Virodhi (anti-Hindu)'. Gandhi on Saturday claimed that the Modi-led government was "chopping the thumb of the youth of the country," drawing a parallel to the story where Dronacharya allegedly cut off Eklavya's thumb. The statement has drawn sharp criticism from several religious leaders, who are now calling for strict action and an ...Read More >
Hyderabad: The BJP's OBC morcha president Dr K. Laxman said the caste census undertaken by the Telangana government is full of loopholes. He characterised it as incomplete, unscientific and not rooted in reality. Addressing the media, he said, "If Chief Minister Revanth Reddy was serious about social justice, he should have made a law and tried to implement it. This is hypocrisy of the party on the OBCs. The percentage of BCs has come down and it should be seen as a measure meant to suppress the BCs. It reflects the Congress party's mentality. They used words like Hindu BCs and Muslim BCs whi ...Read More >

Guwahati, Jun 5 (PTI) Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Thursday said that the caste census will greatly benefit the indigenous Muslim community living in both the Brahmaputra and Barak Valley in the state. The Centre on Wednesday announced that India's 16th Census with caste enumeration will be carried out in 2027. The indigenous Muslim communities of Assam have been demanding for a long time, a caste-based census to assert their distinct socio-cultural identities, the chief minister said on the sidelines of the World Environment Day programme here. ''The proposed caste enumerati ...Read More >
Hyderabad: In a significant boost for 'Make in India' and 'Atmanirbharta' in the aerospace and defence sector, and Hyderabad's growing stature as a global aerospace hub, the complete fuselage of the Rafale fighter jet will now be made in India at Hyderabad. This move marks the first time that these Rafale components will be manufactured outside France for the Indian as well as global markets.French aerospace major Dassault Aviation has signed four production transfer agreements with Tata Advanced Systems Ltd (TASL) for manufacturing key sections of the Rafale fighter jet, including the lateral ...Read More >
ess than 24 hours after he asserted in Nigeria's Abuja that stepping out of the comfort zone, innovating and creating new paths has now become the very essence of today's India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday told the gathering of world's most influential leaders converged in Rio de Janeiro for the G20 Summit that the main reason for India's success lies in his government's 'back to basics' and 'march to the future' approach. Addressing the G20 session on 'Social Inclusion and the Fight Against Hunger and Poverty' at the bayside museum of modern art during the two-day 19th G20 Summit, ...Read More >
Bigg Boss 18: Shilpa Shirodkar is termed 'biggest backstabber' after Vivian Dsena... Deepak Kalal fights with passenger in flight? Know the truth behind viral video Delhi court fixes Nov 28 for hearing former CM Arvind Kejriwal's plea over sanction copy in... Where will the Champions Trophy 2025 be played? ICC to take final call on THIS date Amid divorce rumours with Aishwarya Rai, Abhishek Bachchan recalls telling Amitabh Bachchan he made 'big mistake' by... Deepinder Goyal's Zomato opens Rs 8500 crore QIP share sale, sets floor price at Rs... Delhi Capitals co-owner pens emotional fare ...Read More >
BUDAUN: A court hearing a plea of a Hindu outfit, which had sought permission to worship at Jama Masjid Shamsi here claiming it was a temple, on Tuesday asked the Muslim side to complete their arguments by December 10. Arguing his case, the lawyer for Shamsi Shahi Jama Masjid Intezamia Committee and Waqf Board Asrar Ahmed questioned the locus standi of the Akhil Bharat Hindu Mahasabha to file the petition in the matter. Urging the court to dismiss the plea, the counsel submitted that the mosque is about 850 years old. He stated that there is "no existence of a temple" there and worship by Hin ...Read More >
Karachi-born Shane Sabastian Pereira entered India to live in his ancestral village in Goa just four months after his birth, but it has taken him 43 years to obtain Indian citizenship. IMAGE: Goa Chief Minister Pramod Sawant hands over the Indian citizenship certificate to the Karachi-born Shane Sabastian Pereira. Photograph: @DrPramodPSawant/X Goa Chief Minister Pramod Sawant on Tuesday handed over the Indian citizenship certificate to the Pakistan-born Christian man under the Citizenship (Ame ...Read More >
The Supreme Court halted new temple-mosque legal battles. The court will review the 1991 law impacting religious site status. This law froze the status of religious sites as of August 15, 1947. Several cases, including Gyanvapi and Shahi Idgah, challenge this law. The law's validity is being questioned. The court's decision impacts ongoing and future disputes.In its ruling on the keenly-watched Place of Worship Act case, the Supreme Court said on December 12 that no new Mandir-Masjid suits are to ...Read More >
Bengaluru, Dec 15 (VOICE) Former Minority Commission Chairman Anwar Manipaddy on Sunday refuted the bribery charge levelled by Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, saying the Congress leaders have been offering him bribes to suppress the Waqf encroachment report. CM Siddaramaiah on Saturday alleged that BJP state president B.Y. Vijayendra "tried to bribe" the former Minority Commission Chairperson during the previous government with Rs 150 crore to suppress a probe into the Waqf property encroachment. Speaking to the media, Anwar Manipaddy stated that if Chief Minister Siddaramaiah has any genuine co ...Read More >

Haridwar: A woman politician has been arrested for allegedly letting her boyfriend and others repeatedly rape her 13-year-old daughter in Haridwar, Uttarakhand. The horrifying crime, which occurred between January and March, was exposed when the minor bravely confided in her father, prompting a police investigation that led to the arrest of the accused. The accused was arrested with her boyfriend and one more. According to police reports, the minor was gang-raped multiple times, often in the presence of her mother. The minor, who had been living with her father following her parents' separat ...Read More >
Panaji, Dec 10 (PTI) Karachi-born Shane Sabastian Pereira entered India to live in his ancestral village in Goa just four months after his birth, but it has taken him 43 years to obtain Indian citizenship. Goa Chief Minister Pramod Sawant on Tuesday handed over the Indian citizenship certificate to the Pakistan-born Christian man under the Citizenship (Amendment) Act. Shane is the second person from the coastal state to receive the certificate, after Joseph Francis Pereira, another Pakistani citizen who was granted Indian citizenship in August this year. Shane, originally from Demello Wado ...Read More >
Dharamshala (Himachal Pradesh) [India], December 11 (ANI): A parliamentary delegation from New Zealand and Fiji on Wednesday highlighted their solidarity with the Tibetan people's ongoing struggle for freedom. The event, which was held on Tuesday, followed the Central Tibetan Administration's official commemoration of the 35th anniversary of the Dalai Lama receiving the Nobel Peace Prize. Also Read | Joe Biden Slams US President-Elect Donald Trump's Tariff Approach, Calls 'Action a Major Mistake'. The delegation, which included New Zealand Members of Parliament (MPs) Joseph Mooney, Ingrid L ...Read More >
Hyderabad, Feb 4 (UNI) BRS Working President and MLA K T Rama Rao (KTR) criticised the Congress government, stating that the people of Telangana have lost faith in its administration. Speaking during the debate on the caste survey report in the Telangana Legislative Assembly, KTR expressed disappointment, saying that many had expected historic announcements following the special Assembly session and Cabinet meeting. However, he claimed that the report lacked new insights and merely reiterated information previously shared by Minister Uttam Kumar Reddy. Referring to the Kamareddy declaration ...Read More >

NEW DELHI: Former head of Air India and chairman of the Railway Board Ashwani Lohani is the new Prime Ministers Museum and Library (PMML) director. The official order for his appointment was issued on Wednesday. A 1980-batch officer of the Indian Railway Service of Mechanical Engineering (IRSME), Lohani is known for turning around various organisations during his illustrious career. Following his retirement from IRSME service, he joined the GMR Group as the CEO. According to the order dated June 4, his appointment to the post of director, Prime Ministers Museum and Library in the rank and pa ...Read More >
The honour is part of FIFPRO's Annual Merit Awards that recognise players giving back to their communities. The global soccer players' union will donate $10,000 to Onana's foundation. Manchester United goalkeeper Andre Onana has won the FIFPRO Impact Award for humanitarian work, for the medical care his foundation provides to underprivileged communities in Cameroon and other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. Doctors have performed more than 1,200 surgical operations over the past three years in collaboration with the 28-year-old's Andre Onana Foundation, which works with medical professionals ...Read More >
NEW DELHI: A political slugfest erupted after Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi was stopped from visiting violence-hit Sambhal in Uttar Pradesh, with the BJP accusing the Congress leader of attempting to incite communal tensions. BJP leaders criticised Gandhi's visit as a desperate political move, driven by competition with the Samajwadi Party (SP) to reclaim vote banks. Meanwhile, Congress leaders, including Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, slammed the government's actions as undemocratic and an assault on constitutional rights. BJP spokesperson Dr Sudhanshu Trivedi described the visit as a "sign of h ...Read More >
Kolkata: BJP on Saturday criticised urban development minister Firhad Hakim over a video where the Kolkata mayor is purportedly heard making a comment on minorities. Hakim had made the comment while addressing an educational conference recently. Hakim said BJP was using his quote out of context and he was only referring to the gulf between the educated and the uneducated. "As education spreads, the gulf will be bridged and there will be one identity," said Hakim. Saying that he would never play ...Read More >
A violent clash between Bangladeshi security forces and supporters of Hindu leader Chinmoy Krishna Das Brahmachari resulted in one fatality on Tuesday. The incident occurred after Brahmachari, an outspoken monk and spokesperson for a newly-formed Hindu advocacy group, was denied bail on sedition charges. According to AFP, citing Nurul Alam, a police inspector stationed at Chittagong Medical College Hospital, public prosecutor Saiful Islam Alif succumbed to injuries sustained during the altercation. "He had deep injuries on his head," confirmed hospital director Taslim Uddin. The clashes erup ...Read More >
New Delhi, Dec 3 (PTI) The Shahi Imam of Delhi's Jama Masjid on Tuesday described as "reprehensible" the alleged mistreatment of Hindu minorities in Bangladesh and asked that country's interim government to take immediate steps to prevent such acts. India has been expressing concerns over attacks on minorities, especially Hindus, in Bangladesh, since Sheikh Hasina's resignation as prime minister in August following months-long students-led protests. Also Read | Rahul Gandhi To Visit Sambhal: DM Requests Neighbouring Districts To Restrict Congress Leader's Proposed Visit to Violence-Hit Town. ...Read More >