News, Views and Information about NRIs.

A NRI Sabha of Canada's trusted source of News & Views for NRIs around the World.



October 13, 2013

Edmonton bus passenger, 87, dies after collision

Edmonton Today - Edmonton News Blog of Oilers' Oil Country: Edmonton bus passenger, 87, dies after collision: Police are investigating the crash between an Edmonton Transit bus with car EDMONTON -- An 87-year-old female bus passenger died Satur...

IIT Ropar’s new campus gets approval

Punjab News Weekly: IIT Ropar’s new campus gets approval: The Main Building of the Transit Campus of IIT Ropar situated in Rupnagar Ropar, October 13 The students and staff members at Indian...

विदेश न ले जाने पर पति नामजद

NRI Law Group Canada: विदेश न ले जाने पर पति नामजद: बरनाला - वादे के मुताबिक शादी के बाद अपनी पत्नी को विदेश न ले जाना एक पति के लिए भारी पड़ गया। वादाखिलाफी से आहत पत्नी ने अपने पति के ...

ਸ਼ਹੀਦ ਬਾਬਾ ਬੈਰਸੀਆਣਾ ਸਾਹਿਬ ਚੈਰੀਟੇਬਲ ਹਸਪਤਾਲ ਤਿਆਰ-ਕਰਨ...

NRI Sabha Canada: ਸ਼ਹੀਦ ਬਾਬਾ ਬੈਰਸੀਆਣਾ ਸਾਹਿਬ ਚੈਰੀਟੇਬਲ ਹਸਪਤਾਲ ਤਿਆਰ-ਕਰਨ...: Karan Ghuman Canada (L) with Shri Prakash Singh Badal, CM Punjab ਦਿੜ੍ਹਬਾ ਮੰਡੀ, 13 ਅਕਤੂਬਰ - ਸ਼ਹੀਦ ਬਾਬਾ ਬੈਰਸੀਆਣਾ ਸਾਹਿਬ ਚੈਰੀਟੇਬਲ ਹਸਪਤਾਲ ਦਿ...

Indian-origin man held guilty of rape in New Zeala...

NRI Law Group Canada: Indian-origin man held guilty of rape in New Zeala...: WELLINGTON: A court in New Zealand Friday held an Indian-origin man guilty of kidnapping two young women and raping them. Pravin Fia Ha...

Phailin hits 90 lakh people; 23 dead, lakhs of homes damaged

9 lakh evacuated from path of Cyclone Phailin
Tropical Cyclone Phailin in the Bay of Bengal.
Gopalpur - Cyclone 'Phailin' on Sunday left a trail of destruction knocking down lakhs of homes affecting nearly 90 lakh people and destroying paddy crops worth about Rs 2,400 crore, but Odisha and Andhra Pradesh escaped from widespread loss of life.
As the largest evacuation efforts in the country's recent history helped keep casualties to the minimum, reports from the two states tonight said that 23 people died, all but two of them in Odisha. Most of the casualties were caused by wall collapse, uprooted trees and in floods.
Communication links were vastly disrupted by the strong winds that went upto a speed of 220 kmph when the "very severe" cyclonic storm crossed the coast near Gopalpur last night and weakened before turning into a depression. Ganjam district in Odisha bore the brunt of the storm.
According to IMD tonight, Phailin weakened further turning into "deep depression" with wind speed of 45-55 kmph and currently lay over northern Chhattisgarh, parts of Orissa and Jharkhand.
A Panama-registered cargoship M V Bingo carrying iron ore was reported to have sunk in rough seas in the impact of the cyclone off the coast of West Bengal, but the crew were spotted in a lifeboat by a Coast Guard Dornier aircraft.
Indian people run for cover following a cyclone warning at Gopalpur beach in Odisha, India, Saturday, Oct. 12 2013.
Authorities in Odisha evacuated nearly nine lakh people, the largest in recent history, ahead of the storm to cyclone shelters and public buildings like schools to avoid a repeat of the monstrous 1999 super cyclone in which nearly 10,000 people were killed.
"We are on the whole quite satisfied with the type of evacuation that was done," Vice Chairman of National Disaster Management Authority M Shashidhar Reddy said. In Gopalpur, where the storm struck first, "almost 90-95 per cent people had been evacuated".
Defence and paramilitary personnel were deployed to carry out relief and rehabilitation measures and restoring infrastructure badly affected by the storm.
The IMD earlier in the day said Phailin has weakened into a cyclonic storm with wind speed between 60 and 70 kmph.
For the cyclone-hit people, however, the intervening sleepless night of Saturday and Sunday would remain etched in their minds forever.

"Thank god we're safe," cried Nirakar Behera on Sunday, looking at the debris he called home until the previous evening. The 50-year-old fisherman of the seaside village of Haripur at Gopalpur had shifted seven km away to a school building at Chatrapur along with his family members. "Our family and villagers have survived the biggest disaster of our lives. We can always rebuild our homes," he added.

"Who can forget what happened? The storm surge was more than three metres tall. I sat at one place in my room, praying," said Pitambar Moharana, a hotel staff on Gopalpur beach. "Not a soul was outdoors in that dark night," he said. "Had we not succeeded in evacuating people in large numbers by using all tactics (including force), the casualty could have been very, very high," said SP (Ganjam) Ashis Singh.

Holidays of civil servants remain cancelled and most of them are deployed with disaster response teams with heavy equipment as well as helicopters and boats being used for rescue and relief operations.

A farmer lamented, "Everything has disappeared into sea water. There's no way a single crop will grow here now.
Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik said the primary aim was to minimise loss of human lives and they have successfully managed to do so. "Property to the tune of several crores has been damaged...Rehabilitation will now be done." Giving details of the devastation, Odisha Revenue Minister S N Patro said 14,514 villages in 12 districts have been affected, hitting a population of 80,53,620.
Over 2.34 lakh houses have been damaged and more than 8.73 lakh people evacuated.
Over five lakh hectares of standing crops have been destroyed by the gushing waters causing an estimated loss of Rs 2,400 crore, he said.
An Indian auto-rickshaw driver pushes his three wheeler through water-logged streets during heavy rains in Hyderabad Thursday.

Actor Sanjay Dutt seeks parole extension

NRI Bollywood: Actor Sanjay Dutt seeks parole extension: Sunday, Oct 13, 2013 PUNE:  Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt , currently out of jail on parole for a fortnight, has sought an extensio...

91 dead as bridge collapses near Hindu temple during holy Dussehra festival in India

At least 91 people have been killed and more than 100 injured in a stampede after a bridge collapsed near a remote Hindu temple in India.
People walk past bodies of victims killed in a stampede on a bridge, near Ratangarh temple in Datia
A stampede at a bridge leading to a remote Hindu temple in central India on Sunday killed at least 89 people and injured more than 100, police said.
Nearly 150,000 devotees gathered to celebrate the holy festival of Dussehra at the Ratangarh temple, in a forest outside the town of Datia, 390 km (240 miles) north of the Madhya Pradesh state capital, Bhopal.
A large number of devotees gathered to celebrate the holy festival of Dussehra at the Ratangarh temple, in a forest outside the town of Datia, 390 kilometres north of the state capital, Bhopal.
But a bridge leading to the temple collapsed, triggering the stampede.
"The death toll has risen to 91 and 10 others are in a critical condition," Dilip Arya, a deputy inspector general of police, said.
Mr Arya had earlier said a further 100 people were being treated for injuries in nearby hospitals.
As the bridge collapsed, people began rushing towards the temple and were killed in the stampede, Mr Arya said, adding that a few devotees drowned as they jumped into the Sindh river.

Police charged at crowds with batons: reports

Some local media said the police used batons to control the crowd, prompting many people to panic.
However, Mr Arya insisted "there was no baton-charge" by the police.
The Times of India reported that crowds could seen pelting police with stones as frustration grew over the rescue operation.
Inept handling has led to stampedes on previous occasions.
In February this year, a stampede killed at least 36 Hindu pilgrims, who were part of the world's largest religious festival, which attracted some 30 million people.
Some 102 Hindu devotees were killed in a stampede in January 2011 in the state of Kerala while 224 pilgrims died in September 2008 as thousands of worshippers rushed to reach a 15th-century hill-top temple in Jodhpur.