
AI crash: Agra couple's daughter gives DNA sample for identification of bodies
Neeraj Lavania (51) and his wife, Aparna Lavania (50), among the passengers on the ill-fated London-bound flight, were planning a vacation in the UK, where a relative resides.
S
peaking to TOI, Neeraj's elder brother Satish Lavania said, "I reached Ahmedabad this afternoon, and we are making all efforts to obtain details. The couple's daughter has already submitted her DNA sample as mandated by the authorities."
Regarding the couple's final rites, he said, "We are yet to decide whether the cremation will take place in Agra or Vadodara. Neeraj's in-laws live in Vadodara, and we'll consult with them before proceeding. I'd also like to thank Fatehpur Sikri MP Rajkumar Chahar for facilitating our air tickets from Delhi to Ahmedabad."
Originally from Agra's Akola block, Neeraj had relocated to Vadodara around 17 years ago for work after completing his education at Agra College.
He held a senior position at NielsenIQ in Vadodara. The couple's daughter, Arpana Lavania (18), is currently pursuing her graduation in Vadodara.
Rajeev Saraswat, a BSF sub-inspector and Neeraj's childhood friend, said, "We studied together. I'm devastated by the news of their deaths. Neeraj had a big heart and always stepped forward to help others."
Air India confirmed early Friday that only one of the 242 people onboard flight AI171 to Gatwick survived. The aircraft crashed soon after take-off from Ahmedabad. The flight was carrying 169 Indian nationals, 53 British nationals, 7 Portuguese nationals and 1 Canadian national. The sole survivor is a British national of Indian origin.
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Business Standard
an hour ago
- Business Standard
British F-35 fighter jet makes emergency landing in Japan airport
A British F-35 stealth fighter jet made an emergency landing on Sunday at the Kagoshima airport located in south-western Japan due to a malfunction, airport officials said, as reported by Kyodo News. According to Kyodo News, some departures and arrivals of commercial flights at the airport were affected when a runway was closed for approximately 20 minutes following the incident, which occurred at around 11:30 AM, as officials stated. No injuries were reported. Kyodo News noted that British forces have been conducting a joint drill with Japan's Maritime Self-Defence Force and American forces since August 4, which will continue through next Tuesday, having dispatched an aircraft carrier strike group to the western Pacific. Earlier in July, a British F-35B fighter jet left India after making an emergency landing in Kerala's capital city of Thiruvananthapuram due to a hydraulic system fault. The fighter jet had made an emergency landing at the airport on June 14. The British Navy aircraft is a part of the UK Navy aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales. The fighter jet was out on a routine sortie when it developed a snag and could not land on the ship. The plane reached the Thiruvananthapuram airport, which was designated as the emergency recovery airfield, and requested emergency landing permission. The Indian Air Force provided all required support and assisted in the process, including refuelling. British Navy's F-35 fighter jet finally took off from Thiruvananthapuram International Airport on July 22 after remaining grounded at the airport for over a month following a fault in the hydraulic system. A British High Commission Spokesperson had expressed gratitude to the Indian authorities for the support offered in the repair and recovery process of a UK F-35B aircraft. In an official statement, the British High Commission Spokesperson said, "The UK remains very grateful for the support and collaboration of the Indian authorities and airport teams throughout the repair and recovery process", the statement added. The High Commission Spokesperson underscored in their remarks, "We look forward to continuing to strengthen our defence partnership with India." F-35Bs are highly advanced stealth jets, built by Lockheed Martin, and are prized for their short take-off and vertical landing capability.

The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
How villagers fought for an elephant
The rains in August bring joy to Kolhapur, a part of Maharashtra's sugarcane belt. The fields thrive and people get respite from the heat that parches land and spirit. This year, the villages in the area are in mourning. Madhuri, 36, also called Mahadevi, was transferred from her home in Nandani village to Vantara, a wildlife rehabilitation facility run by the Ambani industrialist family, in Jamnagar, Gujarat, over 1,170 km away. Her mahout (elephant handler) Ismail Nidgun, 56, is no longer with her. 'It feels like I have lost my daughter. My days are empty just like this gajshala (elephant home),' Nidgun says. Originally from Davangere in Karnataka, he had been with Madhuri for seven years. Her transfer order came on July 28 after a Supreme Court directive. She was moved from the 1,300-year-old Jain Mutt, the Shree Digambar Jain Atishay Kshetra Vrishabhachal to Vantara, 'Anant Ambani's dream project,' as per information on the website. Anant is one of three children of Reliance chairperson Mukesh Ambani, one of the wealthiest men in the world. On August 3, images began pouring in of thousands of people marching early in the morning, in protest, from Nandani to the Kolhapur District Collectorate, about 40 km away, appealing to get Madhuri back. 'Did Ambani get only our Madhuri to take?' asks Mahavir Jugale, 56, a Nandani-based farmer. Shopkeeper Vijay Teli, 51, in the Gandhi Chowk area, a bustling market in the village, says, 'Mate pasun mula la vegla kela ahe,' (They separated the child from her mother). Whenever the bell rings, we still think she is coming.' Madhuri wore a bell around her neck which would ring each time she ambled along. 'Children used to line up to play with her,' he adds. Everyone has a Madhuri moment to share. Points of view On July 28, the Supreme Court upheld the July 16 Bombay High Court order to transfer the elephant to the Radhe Krishna Temple Elephant Welfare Trust (RKTEWT), a part of Vantara, registered in 2019. Vantara, which describes itself as being committed to 'rescuing, rehabilitating, and protecting endangered species' spans 998 acres. The affidavit filed by Vantara indicates that the facility houses 238 elephants. In the lane adjoining the Mutt, Sushila Kambhoje, 70, says, 'They called Madhuri dangerous and ailing. How could she be dangerous? On the day of her farewell, 2,000 people surrounded her. Did she even hurt a single person? An ailing animal can never be active. They used all the means to take her away.' Sushila, a homemaker, remembers Madhuri from when she was three years old. The elephant, locals say, was brought to the Mutt from the Sakrebailu elephant camp, Shimoga in Karnataka in 1992. The Mutt, which makes decisions on the socio-religious affairs of the Digambar Jain community of a few villages in Maharashtra and Karnataka, has a history of domesticating elephants for the last 400 years, say leaders in the community. Elephants have been part of religious processions, and participate in festivals like Ganeshotsav and Muharram. 'We have treated her as a family member. PETA's (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) claims that she is distressed are false,' says the financial manager of the Mutt, Shirish Herwade. He says PETA officials visited the Mutt in 2020 and proposed moving Madhuri to Vantara. 'They offered us a robotic elephant. When the Mutt refused, PETA offered us money and infrastructure development,' he adds. PETA claims that the elephant had 'untreated ailments including foot rot, overgrown nails, abscesses, arthritis and behavioural distress' says an SC-approved high-power committee (HPC) report. The HPC had been set up by the Tripura High Court in November 2022, after a lawyer, Sudipta Nath, had filed a public interest litigation seeking an inquiry into past transfers of elephants to RKTEWT. After the public outcry, the Maharashtra government intervened, holding meetings with a delegation from Kolhapur and the Vantara team. On August 6, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis announced publically, 'Vantara has offered to set up a satellite rehabilitation centre in Nandani and join the Maharashtra government's application in court, requesting the return of Madhuri.' Vantara put out a statement on social media saying, their 'involvement in this matter has been limited to acting strictly in accordance to the binding directions issued by the Supreme Court and Bombay High Court.' It said Vantara's role was simply as a caretaker to the animal. Vantara proposed a centre in Nandani, which will include a hydrotherapy pond for joint and muscular relief, a larger water body for swimming and natural movement, laser therapy and a treatment room for physical rehabilitation, a covered night shelter, an open space for unrestricted movement without chains, a sand pit, and an on-site veterinary clinic, among other facilities. 'From the beginning these people should have used their specialists in the village itself instead of relocating the elephant,' says Sagar Shambhushete, one of the Mutt's trustees. The Mutt alleges that after the 2020 meeting, PETA started documenting pictures of Madhuri while socialising with the villagers. Between the Mutt and the HPC The Mutt's top authority says on condition of anonymity, 'PETA is less of an animal rights organisation and more of a mediator for big people.' He alleges that PETA joined hands with Vantara, who has collected animals from all over the country. The Jain Mutt had an ownership certificate under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. PETA dismisses the claims, saying it was the decision of HPC. They also say the Mutt has disregarded wildlife protection laws on several occasions. 'The temple was provided an in-person opportunity to make their case at all levels of the process, but failed,' says Khushboo Gupta, Director of Advocacy of PETA, adding this was not the first elephant taken to Vantara from Maharashtra. An elephant from Sangli district's Vita was taken too. The Mutt's stone building, with wooden interior, sees thousands of devotees from across the Kolhapur-Sangli region and from some parts of Karnataka. 'When nothing worked, PETA approached the HPC; they just wanted our elephant at any cost,' says Shambhushete. Former Judge Deepak Verma led the HPC and issued the first order on December 28, 2023. The HPC's June 3 report suggests that PETA India highlighted the need for Madhuri's transfer to a 'scientifically managed sanctuary' such as the RKTEWT, Jamnagar. The Mutt has also alleged that HPC's sub-committee report findings are 'biased' and 'exaggerated', and that PETA's photographic and veterinary material 'lacks context'. The sub-committee, comprising officials from the Forest Department, visited the Mutt premises on June 12, 2024, inspected the facilities, and recommending improvements, including an opportunity for socialisation. The committee also confirmed that the elephant's physical well-being, diet and nutrition were being maintained. After three months, Vivek Khandekar, Additional Principal Chief Conservator of Forest (Wildlife), inspected the facility, making observations that the 'elephant's back and toenails are showing good improvement and she is walking properly'. He noted other improvements as well, including a daily walk of 5 to 10 km and a weekly bath in the Panchganga River. A representative of the Mutt says, 'Within three months of the first inspection in June 2024, we implemented all the recommendations made by the team.' Protests echo through the village The hoardings outside Nandani read: 'One signature for Madhuri'. Every corner of the village is plastered with such banners. MLC Satej Patil launched an online signature petition, which received 2,04,421 signatures from across the country. 'We have sent the hard copies to President Droupadi Murmu via post,' he says. Meanwhile, a 'Boycott Jio' movement intensified in Kolhapur with as many as 743 villages participating. The movement, which started on social media, was later spearheaded by former MP and a farmer leader Raju Shetti. He claims, 'At least 2 lakh people ported their Jio numbers to other networks.' Shetti claims PETA offered him ₹2 crore to help convince the Mutt to transfer the elephant. Meanwhile, a letter Shetti had allegedly written in 2018 went viral. It had asked that the Madhuri be shifted to Gadchiroli animal centre until they found a mahout. Shetti says, 'The Mutt approached me then to do something. But we found a mahout in a month. At the time no one was bothered, so why now?' Vantara's involvement The locals and their representatives have also raised concerns over similar notices sent to several mutts in Maharashtra and Karnataka. The villagers ask whether PETA and the HPC are in the business of transferring elephants to Vantara. In Kolhapur's neighbouring district of Sangli, the Ganpati Panchayatan Devasthan Trust in Tasagaon say they received a phone call from a man, who claimed to be a vet with a government facility, offering to provide an unfit certificate to transfer the trust's elephant Gauri to Vantara. 'I asked him to give us a proposal in writing. In the meanwhile, Nandani's issue flared up,' says Rajendra Patwardhan, the president of the trust in Tasagaon, who brought in the elephant in 1998. Patwardhan says similar complaints have been filed against the Karisiddeshwara Mutt in Karnataka's Belagavi district and Mahanteshwar Swami in Raichur. An environmentalist from Bengaluru filed a complaint with the Forest Department concerning the rehabilitation of elephants Padma from Shedbal in Maharashtra, Dhurva from Alakhnur, and Meenika from Bichale. Conservationists see this situation as a government convenience due to limited resources. The Co-Founder of Stripes and Green Earth Foundation, Sagnik Sengupta, said, 'This situation is arising because Vantara offers facilities that can aid elephants in distress, but this could be effective if there are rescue centres across the country. At the same time, the Wildlife Protection Act offers no safeguards for exotic pets. In the absence of government infrastructure, Vantara's resources could fill critical gaps.' Meanwhile, a Bengaluru-based wildlife conservationist, on condition of anonymity, says, 'For the government, private rescue centres are the first choice to save costs. However, handing over exotic animals to private players is not viable.' Edited by Sunalini Mathew


Indian Express
2 hours ago
- Indian Express
Against All Odds: Inside a school with no bells, benches or books; just learning through observation
When children arrive at Gokul learning centre in the morning, they don't rush to find their assigned seats as there are no benches to sit on, no uniforms to straighten, and no morning bell to signal the start of classes. Instead, the day begins with the gentle notes of traditional Indian music floating through the air. Dr Jyotsna Pethkar, founder of Gokul and a medical practitioner, had a simple dream. 'During my schooling, I always felt I could have experienced open classrooms and explored topics beyond textbooks,' she explains. Thirteen years ago, she decided to make that dream a reality. Today, Gokul operates like no other conventional school. There are no rigid timetables, no heavy textbooks to carry, and no pressure of scoring high marks. Yet, students here learn everything from mathematics, science, economics, to languages and social studies, but in a different way. 'Our focus is on observation-oriented learning,' Pethkar says. 'We don't follow the structured pattern you see in conventional schools with separate lectures for each subject.' Instead of opening textbooks, Gokul's day starts with something far more exciting: current affairs discussions. The first hour and a half is dedicated to talking about what's happening in the world. When a news story like the Iran-Israel conflict comes up, it doesn't stay just a news item. The discussion naturally flows into the history of the region, the geography of the countries involved, how it affects India, what people there eat, how their economy works, and much more. 'Students love this way of teaching because it's interesting,' Pethkar explains. 'One topic connects to another, and before they know it, they've learned history, geography, economics, and international relations, all from a single news story.' Indrayani Chavan, who also teaches at Gokul and is an Indology expert, has seen how this approach transforms learning. 'All students participate in the discussions, listen carefully, and get their concepts cleared. There's no need for rote learning, so students learn without stress.' Unlike most traditional schools, Gokul believes in preparing children for life. The school day runs from 9 am to 2:30 pm with a brief recess. In these hours, children are engaged in various areas such as cooking, first-aid training, communication, astronomy sessions, field visits, debates, painting, sports, and dance, among others, alongside their regular academic tasks. 'We have limited intake, so as to focus on each child,' Chavan explains. 'Through periodic evaluation, we get an idea about each student's interests and likes. This makes it easier for parents to decide about their child's future.' The school admits students between ages 6 and 14. After completing their time at Gokul, students enroll with the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) for their tenth standard board exams and then continue to colleges of their choice. Moreover, one of the advantages noticed is the reduced stress on their children. 'I used to be in conventional school till fourth grade, where I was forced to learn Science, Math and other subjects while I loved painting. After admission to Gokul, I used to be guided by domain experts and invested the majority of my daily time in painting, which landed me in the National Institute of Fashion Technology in Bengaluru,' says Vedika Gadgil, first-year student at NIFT. 'There was no pressure for higher percentages. Children get adequate rest and can spend time honing essential skills in art, sports, and other areas. Even they excel after getting into the competitive entrance exams as learning has been concept-based, focused on understanding through field visits, and practical experience in addition to theoretical touch,' Vedika adds. Over 13 years, six batches of students have passed from Gokul, and the results have been encouraging. 'Students develop better clarity in thoughts and decision-making, which makes it easier for them to choose their careers,' Chavan says. Speaking to The Indian Express, Shraddha Mokashi, a school psychologist, says, 'As a parent, I have noticed my daughter is more confident, asks better questions, and has a genuine curiosity about the world around them. She loves cricket, and since she's not required to attend coaching classes she can train for at least 4 hours daily in the sport.'