Mock drill conducted at Rashtriya Raksha University in Shivamogga
The faculty and the students of the Shivamogga campus of Rashtriya Raksha University conducted the civil defence mock drill on Wednesday afternoon.
Emergency sirens were sounded to create a scene of hostile attack, and students, who were playing cricket, lay on the ground, covering their faces with their hands. They were told to crawl to safer places, if possible. As part of the drill, rescue workers rushed to the spot and carried them to a safer places for healthcare. The students demonstrated how to handle the situation if there was an attack when they were inside the classroom.
The teaching staff, led by Kaveri Tandon, director of the campus, monitored the drill. 'Mock drills are being conducted at the university's headquarters in Ahmedabad. We also did an exercise for the benefit of our students, who are studying security management and defence and strategic studies. They were told what to and what not to do. This exercise will help them understand the difficulties faced in a real situation,' Ms. Tandon said.
In the morning class, Ms. Tandon said, the students were eager to discuss Operation Sindoor. 'I entered the classroom to teach community policing. However, the students wanted to discuss Operation Sindoor. I had a fruitful discussion about the latest developments in the aftermath of the terror attack at Pahalgam,' she said.
The campus has been set up at Ragi Gudda in Shivamogga. The State government has allocated 23 acres for the campus at Thammadihalli near Ayanur in Shivamogga taluk. At present, 42 students are on campus, which was started in 2023.
The university offers undergraduate and postgraduate courses. Undergraduate courses are offered in Security Management and Defence & Strategic Studies. Postgraduate courses are offered in Criminology and Forensic Science, Clinical Psychology, Defence & Strategic Studies and PG diploma in Political Science and Management.
'We have students from all over the country. There is time till June 30 to apply for undergraduate courses. Interestingly, after the Pahalgam attack, many students have enquired about the course on Defence and Strategic Studies,' the director said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Print
30 minutes ago
- The Print
Tarn Taran man held for ‘espionage', ‘shared' sensitive info with ISI on army movements during Op Sindoor
'Gagandeep Singh had been in contact with the Pakistan ISI and Gopal Singh Chawla, sharing sensitive information concerning army movements during Operation Sindoor,' DGP Yadav said to the media. The accused has been identified as Gagandeep Singh alias Gagan. Director General of Police, Punjab, Gaurav Yadav said that Singh was arrested on the basis of information received by the Counter-Intelligence unit of Punjab Police. He has been booked under the Official Secrets Act, 1923. New Delhi: The Punjab Police Tuesday said they have arrested a man from Punjab's Tarn Taran who was allegedly in contact with Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and a Pakistan-based supporter of Sikh separatism named Gopal Singh Chawla. Investigation has revealed that Singh was allegedly involved in sharing classified information, including details like troop deployments and strategic locations, posing a threat to national security. 'Preliminary investigation reveals that Gagandeep Singh had been in touch with Pakistan-based Khalistani supporter Gopal Singh Chawla for the past 5 years, through whom he was introduced to the Pakistani Intelligence Operatives (PIOs). He also received payments from the PIOs,' DGP Punjab added. The police have said that they have recovered a mobile phone containing intelligence that Singh allegedly shared with the PIOs. It also allegedly contains 20 ISI contacts. 'Thorough financial and technical investigations are underway to trace other linkages and establish the full scope of this espionage network,' the DGP said. This is the latest in a slew of arrests made following the India-Pakistan conflict and India's Operation Sindoor. Over the past few weeks, several individuals have been arrested over allegations of espionage across India. While some have been booked under the Official Secrets Act, others face charges related to threatening India's sovereignty. Earlier last month, a social media influencer from Haryana, Jyoti Malhotra, was also arrested. Meanwhile, two Pakistan embassy staffers were declared persona non grata by India and ousted for indulging in espionage activities. According to investigators, these staffers had been running spy syndicates recruiting Indians to provide them with intelligence. A CRPF personnel who was earlier posted in Pahalgam that witnessed a terror attack on 22 April, where 25 tourists and one local was killed, is in National Investigation Agency's custody. The Delhi Police Special Cell has also launched a crackdown on such rackets. The anti-terror unit has arrested two brothers from Rajasthan's Deeg for allegedly providing SIM cards to PIOs. These SIMs were reportedly used in an attempt to honey trap DRDO officials, with the brothers also receiving training to gather intelligence. (Edited by Zinnia Ray Chaudhuri) Also read: Kolkata cops arrest 'absconding' Pune law student 'for hurting religious sentiments' in Op Sindoor post


Mint
42 minutes ago
- Mint
Punjab man held for ‘spying' for Pakistan; cops say he shared information on Army movements during Operation Sindoor
Punjab Police arrested a man for being in contact with Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and sharing sensitive information concerning army movements during Operation Sindoor, Director General of Police, Punjab Police said on Tuesday. Gagandeep Singh, aka Gagan, was arrested after information was received from the Counter Intelligence Unit of the Punjab Police. The DGP said that Gagan is accused of engaging in sharing classified details, including troop deployments and strategic locations, posing a threat to national security. Preliminary investigation revealed that Gagan had been in touch with Pakistan-based Khalistani supporter Gopal Singh Chawla for the past five years, through whom he was introduced to the Pakistani Intelligence Operatives (PIOs). He also received payments from PIOs via Indian channels, the DGP said in a post on X. A mobile phone containing intelligence that he shared with the PIOs, as well as the details of over 20 ISI contacts, has been recovered. An FIR has been registered under the Official Secrets Act at PS City, Tarn Taran, and further investigation is in progress, the DGP added. 'Thorough financial and technical investigations are underway to trace other linkages and establish the full scope of this espionage networks,' the DGP said. Earlier, police had arrested six persons, including a woman from Malerkotla district, for allegedly spying for Pakistan. Under Operation Sindoor, the Indian armed forces carried out pre-dawn missile strikes on May 7 on nine terror targets in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), including the Jaish-e-Mohammad stronghold of Bahawalpur and Lashkar-e-Taiba's base in Muridke, in response to the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack that claimed 26 lives. A court on Monday extended till June 5 the police custody of mechanical engineer Ravindra Verma, arrested for alleged spying and sharing sensitive information about warships and submarines to Pakistan after the prosecution submitted that his colleagues need to be questioned. According to a PTI report, the 27-year-old junior engineer who worked with a defence technology firm was arrested by the Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) last week. He is a resident of Kalwa in neighbouring Thane. Verma was produced before a court in Thane on Monday at the end of his previous remand. Police requested the extension of Verma's custody explaining to the court the need to conduct a probe at Verma's workplace and question his colleagues. According to police, Verma was lured into passing classified information after being honey-trapped by a Pakistani agent posing as a woman on Facebook, the PTI report added. Police had said that Verma shared sensitive information about warships and submarines to the Pakistani intelligence operative through sketches, diagrams and audio notes, and received money from various bank accounts in India and abroad in return. Verma's lawyer, however, argued that his arrest was illegal as the ATS didn't follow the legal guidelines. The lawyer submitted that the court had not seen any solid proof and that the blue diary recovered from him only contained work-related note, the report added.


New Indian Express
an hour ago
- New Indian Express
Bar Council seeks release of law student arrested for social media post on Op Sindoor
NEW DELHI: The Bar Council of Delhi has demanded the immediate release of Instagram influencer Sharmistha Panoli, who was arrested by Kolkata Police for her social media remarks concerning Operation Sindoor. Panoli, a 22-year-old law student from Kolkata studying in Pune, was arrested late on May 30 in Gurugram. She was taken to Kolkata and produced before a court, which remanded her to judicial custody till June 13. In a statement on Monday, Bar Council of Delhi Chairman Surya Prakash Khatri said, 'The Bar Council of Delhi strongly condemns the arrest of Sharmistha Panoli over a social media video, despite the fact that she immediately deleted it and apologised when some people found it hurtful.' 'I, on behalf of the Bar Council of Delhi, demand her immediate release to uphold the scale of justice,' he added. Khatri criticised the 'high-handedness and unnecessary haste' of Kolkata Police, calling the arrest 'selective, excessive, and politically motivated.' Panoli has been booked under IPC sections related to promoting enmity.