Latest news with #Fauzia


Time of India
25-05-2025
- Health
- Time of India
Larval surveys identify and destroy Aedes mosquito breeding sources
Kalaburagi: Following pre rainfall, the Kalaburagi district administration and health family welfare departments initiated larval surveys to identify Aedes mosquito breeding sources. In conversation with TOI, deputy commissioner B Fauzia Tarannum told that she has directed health officials to eliminate Aedes mosquito breeding sites and strengthen larval surveillance to prevent dengue transmission. She emphasised the need for collaboration with elected members, gram panchayat, town panchayat, city council, municipal corporation, and various departments. She explained that dengue spreads through Aedes mosquito bites and recommended releasing guppy fish in standing water, particularly in stone mines of Chittapur, Shahabad, and Sedam taluk, as well as in wells, stagnant areas, and water tanks. She insisted on conducting this as a campaign while ensuring vaccination programmes will be held. Aedes mosquitoes breed in water-filled containers like storage tanks, barrels, drums, flower pots, and household items including ceramics, plastic bags, tyres, and coconut shells. The administration emphasised door-to-door awareness campaigns to prevent water stagnation. Staff at transport organisation workshops and depots should be informed, with posters displayed on buses for widespread awareness. Kalaburagi district has reported dengue cases in recent years, primarily due to poor sanitation. The municipal corporation should conduct cleanliness drives and penalise those who litter. DC Fauzia said she instructed Kalaburagi City Corporation commissioner Avinash Shinde to remove roadside building debris. She also called for cleanliness campaigns in hostels, educational institutions, village panchayats, taluk panchayats, and civic bodies. Speaking to TOI, district entomologist Chamaraja Doddamani said that awareness on dengue symptoms and transmission is being conducted and departmental coordination is strengthened. He confirmed dedicated dengue treatment facilities with 20 beds at GIMS Hospital and 10 beds in each taluk hospital.


New York Times
18-03-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
Revolution Freed Their Country, and Upended Their Lives
In 1964, when Abdulrazak Gurnah was a teenager in Zanzibar — an archipelago off the coast of East Africa that had been an Omani sultanate for centuries, and is now part of Tanzania — African revolutionaries overthrew the Arab-led constitutional monarchy, forcing Gurnah and his family to flee the violence for England. 'The thing that motivated the whole experience of writing for me was this idea of losing your place in the world,' he told The New York Times after he won the Nobel Prize in Literature, in 2021. His first novel since receiving the honor, and his 11th overall, imagines what it was like for those who stayed. Though it takes place in the long shadow of the bloody historical conflict that formally ended the colonization of East Africa — by Portugal, Germany, England, Oman and others — violence itself is absent in 'Theft,' resigned to passing allusions, sidelined by the stuff of family drama. The protagonist, Karim, is born in Zanzibar in the aftermath of revolution, only to be all but abandoned by his young mother, Raya, when she flees her bad marriage and the stifling parents who arranged it. Leaving him in their care, his 'mother treated him like a possession she was fond of but the details of whose welfare she was happy to leave to her parents,' the adolescent Karim thinks. In a blunt bit of foreshadowing, he tells himself: 'He would do things differently when he became a father, that was certain. He would make sure his child knew it was desired.' As the handsome and intelligent Karim's station in life rises, along with his self-regard, he attracts the attention, even wonder, of those around him: his older half brother, Ali, who takes him in after his grandmother dies and encourages him to attend university in Dar es Salaam; Fauzia, a brainy student at the local teachers college who becomes his wife; the government minister who recruits him to work on a sustainable green development plan backed by the European Union. Even his mother shows an affection for the older Karim that she never did when he was a child, inviting him to visit and then live with her and her new husband in Dar. 'Look how tall you are, so handsome and so clever!' she exclaims upon seeing him for the first time in two years, when he's 16. Perhaps most worshipful of all is Badar, the servant boy who comes to work for Raya under mysterious circumstances and who relishes every glance Karim directs his way. When Badar is dismissed from that home, Karim takes him to live with him and Fauzia in Zanzibar, finding him a front-desk job at a hotel converted from an Omani mansion (as many were during the post-independence tourist boom). Gurnah's stoic prose isn't always well suited to the tragic, even operatic events that unfold as Karim, Fauzia and Badar make their way in 1980s Tanzania; the author's genteel formality can feel anachronistic and awkward. Badar reflects on his cruel dismissal from Raya's household as 'the unpleasantness with the groceries'; Karim and Fauzia's courtship is summarized as weeks of 'shared embraces and kisses.' When Fauzia's friend rants to her about American slavery, informed by 'those magazines you think are such rubbish, while you read your Victor Hugo and Rabindranath Tagore,' Fauzia smilingly replies, 'It's actually Jane Austen at the moment, which is probably even worse.' Yet for all the narrator's reticence, a satisfying melodrama breaks through. The story builds to an engrossing climax involving a white relief worker named Geraldine, who lives at Badar's hotel while she works on an E.U.-funded program to digitize Tanzanian health data. In a Homeric epithet, Gurnah refers to this fair-haired interloper as a 'glowing beauty' no less than five times; when she plays the clarinet from her room, you wouldn't be out of line to think of the sirens' song. Karim, Badar and Fauzia all end up broken by this foreigner in separate ways. In Gurnah's hands, however, theatrics are never an end in themselves. 'What do these people want with us?' Fauzia's mother, Khadija, laments, consoling her daughter in Geraldine's wake. Unlike Gurnah, the characters in this novel remained in Tanzania during the revolution — but they too understand the experience of 'losing your place in the world.' Poor Badar, subject to the whims of those more fortunate than he is, is tired of the captivity of poverty, of only 'seeing the world through the computer.' Whatever the reason foreigners come to her homeland, Khadija has seen enough to know that their intentions are rarely pure. 'She is not a tourist. She is a volunteer,' Fauzia clarifies about Geraldine. Her wise and wary mother replies, 'What's the difference?'

Zawya
19-02-2025
- Politics
- Zawya
Eritrea: Meeting with Reconciliation Committees
Ms. Fauzia Hashim, Minister of Justice, met with members of 805 reconciliation committees from 161 administrative areas in the Gash Barka Region. During the meeting, Ms. Fauzia officially launched the committees' work and provided guidelines on their operations. This meeting was part of a series of discussions the Minister has been conducting across 11 sub-zones from 12 to 16 February. Ms. Fauzia highlighted that the Eritrean people have long-standing customary laws, shared cultural values, and a common history, which were further strengthened during the armed struggle for independence. She emphasized that the establishment of reconciliation committees would play a crucial role in fostering public participation, preserving traditional conflict resolution methods, and reinforcing societal values. These efforts, she noted, are essential for maintaining lasting peace and stability. Ms. Fauzia further clarified that the mission of the reconciliation committees is not to assign guilt but to mediate and resolve conflicts peacefully. She encouraged committee members to work towards promoting peace and harmony by drawing upon the wisdom and knowledge inherited from previous generations. It is worth recalling that Minister Fauzia has been conducting similar meetings with reconciliation committees across the country since the third quarter of 2024. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Information, Eritrea.