logo
CBSE school inaugurated at Perupalem

CBSE school inaugurated at Perupalem

Hans India2 days ago
Bhimavaram: Union Minister of State for Steel and Mines Bhupathiraju Srinivasa Varma praised the establishment of Vidyaaranya Bharateeya Vidya Kendram, a new English medium CBSE school, in the coastal village of Perupalem. The minister described the initiative to provide quality education to the people of the coastal region as inspirational. On Monday, Minister Varma and district collector Chadalavada Naga Rani inaugurated the school building in Perupalem South village of Mogaltur mandal.
The school was built by Dr Gonnabathula Venkata Prasad and his wife Nandini on a sprawling 2.3-acre campus at an estimated cost of Rs 10 crore. Before the inauguration, they lit lamps at the idols of Goddess Saraswati and Lord Ganesha located on the school premises. Minister Varma inspected the 30-classroom building and interacted with the students. He commended Dr Venkata Prasad and Nandini for making a modern educational institution accessible to the people of the Narasapuram area.
District Collector Naga Rani stated that the school would be a great asset to Perupalem, a remote village predominantly inhabited by marginalised communities and fishermen. She also advised the teachers to provide high-quality education to the children. Dr Gonnabathula Venkata Prasad, Nandini, Puneeth, Archana, Rakshith, Sai Priya, and representatives of the Vidyaaranya Bharateeya Vidya Kendram participated in the event.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Himachal apple growers struggle amid washed-out roads; transportation costs skyrocket
Himachal apple growers struggle amid washed-out roads; transportation costs skyrocket

Indian Express

time29 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Himachal apple growers struggle amid washed-out roads; transportation costs skyrocket

Naresh Sharma, a small-time apple grower in the Shimla district of Himachal Pradesh, usually takes his crop to the Parala mandi, located 7–8 kilometres from his village. Usually, transporting a single carton of apples from Kiar under the Theog subdivision costs him around Rs 50. This year, however, the cost has skyrocketed to Rs 200 per carton. Reason: An over-flooded Gai Khad (nallah), which has no bridge, and has become extremely risky to cross due to the incessant rain lashing the region. Crossing Gai Khad is essential to reach the Bhanu Raina link road that connects to the Parala apple market. 'Despite the lack of a bridge, it was earlier manageable to cross the khad. But now, due to the strong water current and continuous rain, it's too dangerous for a loaded four-wheeler,' says Naresh, who is also up-pradhan of Kiar Gram Panchayat. 'I've had to employ Gorkha workers to carry each carton across the khad on their shoulders, where I've arranged another vehicle to transport the apples to the mandi. All this has pushed my transport cost to Rs 250 per carton,' says the 31-year-old. 'A fortnight ago, we met the Deputy Commissioner of Shimla, Anupam Kashyap, about Gai Khad. Although work to lay the culverts in the khad started, two of the culverts were washed away by the fast current of water. This time, I don't think that we will get any profit from our apple crop,' he adds. 'A very complex situation' About 95 km away, in Gamog Gram Panchayat under Nirmand block of Kullu district, countless sacks of apples lie by the roadside or under temporary sheds. The sacks have been there for days to be transported to the Market Intervention Scheme (MIS) centre in the Nirmand subdivision in Anni. 'Incessant rain forced us to pluck our Red Golden apples much earlier than usual, putting this into the C grade category,' says Jagdish Kumar, husband of Gram Panchayat pradhan Kamlesh Devi. 'The roads here are so bad that pickup drivers refuse to come. We've requested local horticulture officials for help, but they only ask us to wait. If the rain continues, our apples will rot. Some of the people managed to transport the apples packed in sacks to the procurement centre, but the centre is yet to procure these. The apple sacks were lying roadside in the centre.' Devinder Chauhan, Horticulture Development Officer, said it was 'a very complex situation'. 'The incessant rain and bad weather made many apple growers pluck their fruit much earlier than the desired time. This kind of fruit falls under the C category, which couldn't be sold in the markets, and the Himachal Horticulture Produce Marketing and Processing Corporation Ltd (HPMC) is bound to procure such apples at the rate of Rs 12 per kg. However, the apple should not be in a bad condition. We have to see the quality of the apple before procuring it.' Meanwhile, the Horticulture Department has projected an estimated production and procurement of 6 lakh metric tonnes (MT) of apples this season. 'Just the beginning of the season' The struggles of Naresh and Jagdish are not isolated cases. Many apple growers, particularly in lower-elevation areas, face similar challenges. Orchardist Naresh Kashyap says small apple growers usually transport their crop to the nearby collection centres, but big and established orchardists go to Pinjore Apple Market in Haryana, Chandigarh Grain Market, Sector 26, and other local markets in Himachal Pradesh. 'This time the condition of link roads is so bad that we have to transport the apple cartons first in pick-ups to reach the national highway, and further upload them in the big trucks. The condition of national highways is also not good. Authorities removed debris and landslide material from the road, but again landslides took place,' Kashyap says. 'There's no doubt that cloudbursts and nearly two months of continuous rain have severely damaged road infrastructure, which is critical for the apple trade. There are reports of heavy orchard losses in disaster-hit areas like Mandi and Kullu, where orchard roads have also been destroyed, making it difficult to bring apples to purchasing centres. However, this is just the beginning of the season, which continues until late October,' says Vinay Singh, Director, Department of Horticulture. 'In higher-elevation areas like Kinnaur, Lahaul & Spiti, and parts of Shimla, apples are yet to reach markets, and road connectivity there is relatively better. Although restoring road connectivity is in the domain of the PWD department, our horticulture officers have been regularly taking up this particular issue in the meetings with deputy commissioners of the districts.' Recently, videos surfaced showing farmers dumping apples into streams, claiming they couldn't transport them due to damaged roads. However, horticulture officials clarified that these were C-grade apples, often bird-damaged, prematurely plucked, or already rotten. 'While the MIS covers C-grade apples, the ones in those videos were unsellable,' an official said. 'Ensure hassle-free transportation' Meanwhile, the crisis has reached the political arena. On Tuesday, BJP MLA Lokender Kumar from the Anni Assembly seat in Kullu, and Congress MLA Mohan Lal Brakta from Rohru in Shimla raised the matter during the ongoing Monsoon Session. 'There are hundreds of apple growers in my constituency, especially in Bagipul and Nirmand, waiting to move their produce to the markets,' said Kumar. Brakta urged the government to intervene. 'Apple is the main source of livelihood in Himachal. The season has begun, and the government must ensure hassle-free transportation, particularly in disaster-hit areas,' said Bract. As the MLAs raised the issue during discussion on the issue of natural disaster in the Assembly, Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu assured that no grower would be left out of the procurement process. CPI(M) leader Sanjay Chauhan also demanded immediate arrangements for transportation and procurement from cut-off regions, even suggesting temporary collection centres where road connectivity has collapsed. Ex-CM and LoP Jairam Thakur has already raised this issue on various platforms.

NMR wages fixed for 2024–25 in ASR dist
NMR wages fixed for 2024–25 in ASR dist

Hans India

timean hour ago

  • Hans India

NMR wages fixed for 2024–25 in ASR dist

Paderu (ASR District): Alluri Sitarama Raju District Joint Collector Dr MJ Abhishek Gowda directed officials to ensure payment of prescribed wages to workers under the NMR (Nominal Muster Roll) system for 2024–25. He chaired a meeting with officials of various departments at the ITDA conference hall on Wednesday. The Joint Collector announced the revised wage structure for both technical and non-technical categories. Under non-technical categories, skilled workers have been fixed at Rs 629 per day, semi-skilled workers at Rs 524, and unskilled workers at Rs 472. In the technical category, ITI-qualified work inspectors will receive Rs 739, LCE/LME/LEE-qualified work inspectors Rs 1,022, and those with BE (Civil, Mechanical, Electrical) qualifications will be paid Rs 1,315 per day. He clarified that these rates will be applicable across Alluri Sitarama Raju district from July 1, 2024, to June 30, 2025. Labor Department Assistant Commissioner T Sujatha, Chief Planning Officer P Prasad, Additional District Medical and Health Officer Dr T Pratap, Irrigation SE R Nageswara Rao, District Malaria Officer Dr M Tulasi, Forest Range Officer E Prema, and others participated in this meeting.

Pune team documents Kashmir's endangered craft of building houseboats
Pune team documents Kashmir's endangered craft of building houseboats

Indian Express

time2 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Pune team documents Kashmir's endangered craft of building houseboats

From a ban on the construction of new houseboats since 1988 and a dip in the number of craftspersons to increasing difficulty in sourcing deodhar, which is required to make these vessels — this quintessential symbol of a tranquil Kashmir Valley is drifting into history as a lost item of Indian heritage. Before the ageing craftspersons and their indigenous knowledge disappear, a team of researchers from Pune carried out a year-long documentation project that treats the Valley's boat-building traditions as a heritage craft practice. Nearly a year after the team started documenting this craft, master craftspersons and their teams were recently felicitated at the School of Designs in Srinagar in the presence of the director of Jammu & Kashmir's Department of Handicrafts. Funded by the British Museum's Endangered Material Knowledge Programme, this documentation project sheds light on how the network of lakes and rivers that make up the Valley gave rise to the construction of floating dwellings. The study is led by Sayali Athale and Anto Gloren. The other members of the team are Reyan U Rafiq, an interpreter from Srinagar, and researchers Ashutosh Chowhan and Anubhav Sutar from Pune. Gloren and Athale, both architects and woodworkers, have been focusing on timber in building for a while and visited the Valley a few times. 'Kashmir has an amazing range of craftsmanship, including boat building. The shikara even has a GI tag (a Geographical Indication tag, which is a form of intellectual property protection), but the craft of constructing houseboats has never been documented. Since this practice is now endangered, we felt it necessary to help document it,' says Gloren. For centuries, the tradition of making boats shaped the region's culture and character. In the 19th century, these floating houses, called doongas, started being used for tourism — resulting in the well-oiled myth that the British invented houseboats. 'The houseboat has evolved from several variants, and the doonga was the last of its indigenous lineage. The existence of doongas has been recorded since the early 18th century. Yet, in popular narrative, the credit for the invention of the houseboat is given to its late 19th century British patrons. This misrepresentation of the houseboat as being an English invention and not an evolution of the local doonga has meant that it is seen as colonial heritage rather than a local tradition,' says Athale. 'The houseboat is perceived as an import serving tourists, and the history of the communities of local people dwelling in boats before the arrival of the British is often forgotten. Through our research, in tracing its predecessors, we hope to also influence this narrative and help redirect it for the future generations,' she adds. Due to increasing pollution of lakes, the construction of new houseboats was prohibited in 1988. Before its ban, there were thousands of houseboats on Dal and Nigeen lakes, and the Jhelum. Fewer than 750 houseboats remain today. While Srinagar's lakes are increasingly threatened by climate change and siltation, the future of houseboats is closely tied to the life of the lake itself. 'Due to the limitations, the number of craftsmen with the specific skill of houseboat hull construction has reduced over the last 35 years. With the loss of another craftsman in January this year, only four senior craftsmen remain on record who possess this knowledge. While their sons have assisted them in constructing houseboats, their primary professions are not houseboat building. With the passage of these senior craftsmen then, it remains to be seen if the knowledge tradition will be continued,' says Gloren. Houseboats are made from deodhar, which has become increasingly difficult to source due to the depleting forest cover. Forest policies also do not permit harvesting of local timber. Trees that are felled from disease or natural disasters or ones that fall naturally are auctioned by the forest department. 'Given their low quantities, this wood is expensive and often unaffordable for houseboat owners. Additionally, the most important structure of the houseboat, the pasch, which are on both sides of the hull, are to be made from a single piece of wood 50-60 feet long. Such long pieces of wood are increasingly difficult to find. Thus, the practice of construction in deodhar itself is constrained,' says Athale. In the meantime, houseboats have turned into a vehicle for tourism. Only locals remember that the houseboat's ancestors, including the doonga, were, historically, a part of everyday life, and important for the Valley's trade and commerce. To document the tradition of boat building in the Valley, the team, first, got in touch with the community of boat builders — only to come across a modern impediment. 'At a time when craftsmen were interviewed, often by social media users, they were sceptical about the study's earnestness, although they did entertain us with enthusiasm,' says Gloren. After a year of working with the same people, the team managed to build trust, which led the artisans to share important details of boat building. 'Master craftsmen Ghulam Ahmed Najar, his brother Mohammed Subhan Najar, both in their 60s, and their young apprentice, Adil Basheer Penchoo, have assumed the role of teachers. They allowed us to film them working, and explained details. We met wasta (a master craftsman in Kashmiri) Abdul Khaliq during the first week of our study, but lost contact with him. We visited his workshop a few months later to interview him. We also bumped into another craftsman, Mohammad Yusuf Kahwa, rather serendipitously while at a market in Srinagar,' says Athale. Their documentation shows how the houseboat, the doonga and its cargo version, the bahast, were all constructed using deodhar. A reduced version, the sand boat, is now constructed using imported silver oak. 'While the life of a deodhar boat is around 60 years, a silver oak boat will last only a few seasons,' says Gloren. The team was able to secure rare material in film, drawing and oral recordings because they saw a boat being built. 'This happened because seven houseboats were gutted in a fire in 2022 and special permission was granted by the Central government to rebuild them. Their reconstruction was probably the last opportunity to document this process. We have captured it in video, drawings and oral narration… so that it can be revived by the future generations of Kashmir in case it is lost now,' says Athale. Released in 2023, a new policy on houseboats permits minor repair of existing houseboats. 'Through the ups and downs in the local events and resultant fortunes of the people, their love for handwork remains inspiring to study. They find hope and courage through their hand work and we are thankful that we had the opportunity to support this in some way,' says Gloren.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store