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People's President laid to rest
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VOL 44. ISSUE 14
University closes door due to lack of international students UK universities in the past have had glorious time, attracting hundreds of international students, even when it failed to appeal to the local ones. This government's immigration policies, that are aimed to cut down foreigners coming to this country, have finally resulted to what an economically recovering country must fear. It has raised concerns amongst university towns, now dreading similar consequences. The University of South Wales (USW) opened-up its London doors in the Docklands in east London last year, relying on international students to fill its desks. But the university has now cited the government's recent toughening of visa regulations as being part of the reason they have had to shut their doors, after just one year - because it failed to attract any students. The university is now being criticised for wasting money that could have been used to same some of the jobs of the 90 staff set to lose their jobs in Wales. The university employed four staff at the docklands and had rented the space instead of buying it. In a statement to the South Wales Argus, the university said: “The university explored a 'proof of concept' exercise that involved a Continued on page 15
Let noble thoughts come to us from every side
80p
8th August to 14th August 2015
Modi signs an end to Naga insurgency
Signing ceremony of the historic peace accord between Government of India & NSCN in New Delhi
India has signed a peace agreement with the National Socialist Council of Nagaland, a leading tribal separatist group in the northeast, that has been waging guerrilla attacks against central rule for the past six decades. Officials from Prime Minister Narendra Modi pays homage to former President of India, Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam
India's 'Missile Man' APJ Abdul Kalam was laid to rest in a massive public ceremony, at Pei Karumbu burial ground near his hometown Rameshwaram in Tamil Nadu. The former president was buried with state honours; a 21 gun salute. Flown in from New Delhi, his mortal remains were taken from his ancestral house to the local mosque, prior to the funeral. More than one lakh people from all over the country had gathered to pay their last respects. Mourners kept coming through the night and several even slept on the roads, to participate in his final journey. Shops, businesses and hotels remained shut as the entire state marked respect to the leader all fondly called 'People's President.'
Slogans of “Bharat Mata ki Jay” and “Vande Mataram” echoed as all those assembled, choked on the national loss. Prime Minister Narendra Modi offered his final salute and later met with his 99 year old elder brother Mohammad Muthu Labha Maraicker. Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi, Defence Minister Manohar Parriker and Parliament affairs minister Venkaiha Naidu were amongst the government officials who attended the funeral. Kalam passed away in Shillong after suffering a massive cardiac arrest while delivering a lecture in the Indian Institute of Management. One of his noteworthy traits is his ability to click with people regardless of their age group. Millions of Indian
youths have been inspired by him to dream big, and his speeches and interactive sessions have propelled the young to turn those dreams into reality. “No other democratic nation has 600 million youth. The ignited mind of the youth is the most powerful resource -- on the earth, above the earth, under the earth -- and we have that,” were his words. N Bhaskara Rao, founder-chairperson of New Delhi's Centre for Media Studies fondly remembers him, “Kalam never 'talked over' with the youth, he 'talked with' them,” said Rao. “He went down to the level understandable by the person he was speaking to, whether school children or IIM students. That's why young Continued on page 26
Narendra Modi's government signed the accord with NSCN-IM, which has been active in the remote and underdeveloped northeastern region bordering on China, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Bhutan. Continued on page 26
Freedom at Midnight: enclaves swapped in Border deal
Enclave dwellers assembled on both sides of India and Bangladesh border to celebrate
India and Bangladesh swapped land along their border, ending decades long dispute that had left more than 50,000 people virtually stateless. At
midnight the stranded, landlocked islets known as enclaves; 111 Indian plots in Bangladesh and Continued on page 26