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DRFO Gururaj Gouda honoured for village relocation efforts

DRFO Gururaj Gouda honoured for village relocation efforts

Deccan Herald2 days ago
The certification was presented by Union Minister for Environment, Forest and Climate Bhupendrer Yadav in New Delhi on Tuesday as part of the International Tiger Day celebrations.
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Officials told to put in efforts to ensure the overall development of Yadgir district
Officials told to put in efforts to ensure the overall development of Yadgir district

The Hindu

time14 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Officials told to put in efforts to ensure the overall development of Yadgir district

Deputy Commissioner Harshal Bhoyar has said that officers of all government departments in coordination with the general public should put in efforts to ensure the overall development of the district. He was addressing a programme in Yadgir on Wednesday. Mr. Bhoyar said that district has been chosen, among others across the nation, by the Union government to be developed under the Aspirational District Programme. 'The district has climbed to the sixth place and Wadagera taluk is in the fifth place in the index targeted by the Union government for development. However, officers should put in more efforts in coordination with the general public to develop the district further,' he said. He appreciated the officers for what they have achieved and distributed appreciation letters to them during the programme. Chief Executive Officer of the Zilla Panchayat Lavish Ordia said that the efforts being made by ASHAs, anganwadi workers, teachers and various other departments have helped achieve this. Superintendent of Police Pruthvik Shankar, Additional Deputy Commissioner Ramesh Kolar and others were present.

Four more wetlands in Kerala move a step closer to Ramsar tag
Four more wetlands in Kerala move a step closer to Ramsar tag

New Indian Express

timea day ago

  • New Indian Express

Four more wetlands in Kerala move a step closer to Ramsar tag

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: In a major boost to wetland conservation efforts in Kerala, four ecologically significant wetlands -- Vellayani and Akkulam-Veli in Thiruvananthapuram, Kottooli in Kozhikode, and the Kattampally-Valapattanam-Kuppam wetland complex in Kannur -- have moved a step closer to securing the Ramsar site status. The draft Ramsar Information Sheets (RIS) for these wetlands have been prepared by the State Wetland Authority Kerala (SWAK) and will be submitted to the Union ministry of environment, forests and climate change (MoEF&CC) soon. Once approved, these wetlands will be included in the prestigious Ramsar List of Wetlands of International Importance, which currently includes 75 sites from India -- the highest number among Asian countries. Environment department director Suneel Pamidi told TNIE that getting the Ramsar site status will help the state make a more focused effort to conserve these sites. 'It's an international recognition and the status will help get international funding for conservation efforts. SWAK will send the proposal to the Union government which will then submit it to the Ramsar Secretariat. These sites will get the status once the Ramsar Secretariat approves it,' Pamidi said. He said the process is going to be lengthy. 'We selected these sites which meet all the criteria designed by Ramsar. These are unique wetlands with rich diversity and important species of flora and fauna, birds and significant fish resources,' he said. SWAK is expected to approve the proposal in the next meeting to be held in August. Currently, Kerala has three Ramsar Sites -- Ashtamudi, Sasthamkotta and Vembanad Kol. An official with SWAK said the action plans for these sites have already been set in motion and are being executed with the participation of the local community, NGOs, and multiple stakeholders including local bodies.

‘Joyous day': PM hails Piprahwa Buddha relics' return after 127 years
‘Joyous day': PM hails Piprahwa Buddha relics' return after 127 years

Hindustan Times

timea day ago

  • Hindustan Times

‘Joyous day': PM hails Piprahwa Buddha relics' return after 127 years

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday welcomed the return of the sacred Piprahwa relics of Lord Buddha to India after 127 years, calling it a 'joyous day' for the country's cultural heritage. He noted that the relics were discovered in 1898 but taken away from the country during the colonial period. 'Joyous day': PM hails Piprahwa Buddha relics' return after 127 years 'A joyous day for our cultural heritage! It would make every Indian proud that the sacred Piprahwa relics of Bhagwan Buddha have come home after 127 long years. These sacred relics highlight India's close association with Bhagwan Buddha and his noble teachings,' Modi said in a post on X. He added that the development 'illustrates our commitment to preserving and protecting different aspects of our glorious culture.' The relics, excavated from the Piprahwa stupa in present-day Siddharthnagar district of Uttar Pradesh in 1898, arrived in Mumbai on a chartered flight from Hong Kong on Tuesday night. On Wednesday morning, they were flown to Delhi and taken directly to the National Museum in the national capital. Later in the day, the relics were formally placed on display at the museum in a ceremony attended by Union culture minister Gajendra Shekhawat and senior officials from the ministry. Buddhist monks performed rituals as the relics were welcomed amidst traditional chants and ceremonial fanfare. The collection included 334 gemstones—amethysts, coral, garnets, pearls, rock crystals, shells and gold—many of which had been worked into pendants and beads and placed alongside cremated remains of the Buddha inside the stupa sometime between 240 and 200 BCE. The relics had been in private possession for decades after a portion was retained by the family of British colonial officer William Claxton Peppé, who led the excavation. In May this year, the relics surfaced at an international auction organised by Sotheby's in Hong Kong, prompting swift intervention from the Union government. The culture ministry issued a legal notice to the auction house, stating that the relics constituted 'inalienable religious and cultural heritage of India and the global Buddhist community' and should be treated as the 'sacred body of the Buddha.' The government invoked multiple legal, diplomatic, and financial channels to halt the sale of the relics. 'The culture ministry even sent a Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) notice to Sotheby's, warning that proceeding with the auction could amount to a financial crime,' Vivek Aggarwal, secretary, culture ministry, told HT. Sotheby's postponed the auction sale, originally scheduled for May 7, following which the culture ministry was actively seeking to repatriate the relics, HT had earlier reported. According to senior officials, Sotheby's reached out to the Indian government nearly a week after the auction was postponed, asking if the government would be fine with an Indian buyer getting the relics. The government agreed, but with a bunch of strict conditions — the buyer could not be an individual; the relics must not be resold in the future; they should be available to the government as and when required; and they could not leave India without prior government nod. During the negotiations, Sotheby's informed the government that the Pirojsha Godrej Foundation was interested in acquiring the relics. Godrej had reportedly come across media reports about the relics and reached out to Sotheby's independently, citing a 'personal interest in arts and culture.' Subsequently, a meeting was held among representatives of the government, Sotheby's, and Pirojsha Adi Godrej, where all parties agreed to the terms and a memorandum of understanding (MoU) was signed on July 24, 2025. As part of the agreement, the entire collection will be displayed at the National Museum in New Delhi for three months. For the next five years, a 'large portion' of the relics will remain on loan at the museum while the remainder will be housed in a new cultural institution that the Godrej Foundation plans to establish in Mumbai. 'This is the first ever public-private partnership (PPP) for the retrieval of Indian antiquities,' minister Shekhawat said.

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