FLASH NEWS: நிலவின் தென்துருவத்தில் இறங்கிய சீன விண்கலம்; பாறை மாதிரிகளுடன் 25-ந்தேதி பூமிக்கு திரும்பும் **** சீனாவிடம் இருந்து தைவானை சுதந்திரமாக பிரிந்து செல்ல ஒருபோதும் அனுமதிக்க மாட்டோம் என சீன ராணுவம் தெரிவித்துள்ளது ***** அமெரிக்க ஆயுதங்களால் ரஷிய இலக்குகளை தாக்கலாம்.. உக்ரைனுக்கு அனுமதி அளித்த பைடன் ***** அமெரிக்காவில் நடைபெற்ற 'ஸ்பெல்லிங் பீ' போட்டியில் இந்திய வம்சாவளி மாணவர் புருகத் சோமா சாம்பியன் பட்டம் வென்று அசத்தினார் ***** கலவர வழக்குகளில் இருந்து பாகிஸ்தான் முன்னாள் பிரதமர் இம்ரான்கான் விடுதலை ***** நாட்டில் வெப்ப தாக்கத்திற்கு 56 பேர் பலி; என்.சி.டி.சி. அறிக்கை ***** அசாம் மாநிலத்தில் பெய்த கனமழையால் பிரம்மபுத்திரா நதியில் நீர்மட்டம் உயர்ந்துள்ளது ***** நாடு முழுவதும் 3-ந்தேதி முதல் சுங்கச்சாவடி கட்டணம் உயர்வு ***** இங்கிலாந்தில் இருந்து 100 டன் தங்கத்தை இந்தியாவுக்கு கொண்டு வந்த ரிசர்வ் வங்கி ***** பள்ளியிலேயே மாணவ-மாணவிகளுக்கு வங்கி கணக்கு: பள்ளி கல்வித்துறை அறிவிப்பு ***** பிரக்ஞானந்தாவின் வெற்றி வியக்க வைக்கிறது.. கவுதம் அதானி வாழ்த்து ***** திருப்பதி கோவிலில் 65 வயதுக்கு மேற்பட்ட பக்தர்கள் 30 நிமிடத்தில் தரிசனம் செய்ய வசதி ***** சிக்கிமில் மீண்டும் ஆட்சியமைக்கும் எஸ்.கே.எம்? .. அருணாச்சலப் பிரதேசத்தில் பா.ஜ.க முன்னிலை ***** டெல்லியில் தலைவிரித்தாடும் தண்ணீர் பஞ்சம் *****

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Bilateral Cochlear implant surgery performed at ASCOMS Hospital

JAMMU, Aug 29: In a first, a Bilateral Cochlear implant surgery was done in J&K in a single sitting at ASCOMS Hospital.

The surgery was performed by Dr Shalabh Sharma, Senior ENT Surgeon, Director of Cochlear Implant unit from Sir Ganga Ram Hospital New Delhi under the supervision of Dr Rajesh Kumar, Professor and Head, Department of ENT, ASCOMS and his team comprising Dr Sachin Gupta, Dr Navneet Gupta and Dr Hardeep.
The anesthesia team was comprised of Dr Nandita Mehta, Head of Anesthesia Department, Dr Sunaina Gupta and others.

The surgery performed was first of its kind surgery on a 10 yr old child who was having profound degree of hearing loss with delayed speech and language development. The child was unable to have any significant benefit from hearing aids. The main objective of the surgery was to provide better hearing capacity as well as appropriate speech and language development in the child.
ASCOMS Hospital is planning to make Cochlear Implant surgery programme an ongoing process & will be conducting these surgeries on regular basis so as to provide maximum relief to hearing impaired children for their proper hearing and speech growth and also help them to live normal and happy life like other normal hearing children.

Modi's help sought over Cochlear implant prices

30.08.2017
Doctors and public health campaigners have written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking his intervention in bringing down the price of the Cochlear implant, which now costs more than Rs 5 lakh on an average.

The exorbitant price of these implants has kept them away from scores of deaf children. An estimated one lakh children are born each year with hearing impairment.

The price of Cochlear implants has not dropped for the past 17 years. A Karnataka-based ENT surgeon wrote to the prime minister last month seeking his intervention. “My petition was forwarded to an official in the health ministry,” N B Prahlada, the Chitradurga-based doctor, told DH.

There are four companies that manufacture these devices. The productsare imported to India, where it is sold to select hospitals and surgeons.

“The landing price of each implant is around Rs 2.85-3 lakh, but are sold at a price of Rs 5.5 lakh or upwards,”he said.

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Letting silence do the talking

People at the restaurant
29.08.2017
Being only a month old, Talking Hands has been successful in creating a buzz in both the silent and hearing worlds.

Who knew that silence could be both deafening and so hard-hitting at the same time — this is what one experiences as one enters the premises of Talking Hands in Begumpet. The city recently got its first restaurant run and managed by hearing-impaired people. TKM Sandeep, CEO, Deaf Enabled Foundation (DEF) and the Telangana government, are behind this initiative.

“Being a hearing-impaired individual myself, I know the challenges one goes through to get an equal footing in the society, let alone get a job in a company based on one’s talent. A few years ago, I started the Deaf Enabled Foundation with the purview to educate and train hearing-impaired people to get jobs. And for that I was regularly in touch with the state government for support. But this time it was the other way round — seeing our hard work to educate people, B. Venkatesham, who is the Telangana Tourism Secretary, approached us to shoulder the creation of Talking Hands. The premises was given to us free of charge for a year. Now it is our time to let the world know about it,” says Sandeep, explaining how the restaurant came to be.

From the entrance to the table mats and the restaurant’s walls, everything has been designed and created in a way to guide the visitors and teach them the importance of sign language. “We want guests to look into our world of ‘talking hands’, so we encourage them to order by using sign language. We also try to create minimal noise as we think people should let the silence do the necessary talking,” explains Sandeep.

TKM Sandeep, CEO, Deaf Enabled Foundation

Interestingly, all the staff members at the restaurant have been hired from DEF; they are being trained to deal with the customers and manage the restaurant all by themselves. “Across India, there are few restaurants that recruit hearing-impaired people but they are not run by them. Here we are breaking all stereotypes in every possible quarter,” says Ramya, Sandeep’s partner at DEF.

Being only a month old, Talking Hands has been successful in creating a buzz in both the silent and hearing worlds. Guests have been coming to this extraordinary restaurant in steady numbers, appreciating both the concept and the food. “We have to provide great service and food as it’s a restaurant above anything else. The stewards are learning how to deal with different sets of guests without getting overwhelmed. On the other hand, for many guests it’s their first tryst with the silent world,” Ramya explains.

Describing an emotional incident, one of the guests, Meera, says, “Once you get inside, you know you have entered a different world. In other places, you will hear a cacophony of noises but here it’s you and the food talking to each other in your own language. Even the process of ordering the food is so engaging.”

In the following months, the team hopes that Talking Hands and its food will do the talking and they eventually want to spread out to cities in Telangana as well as other states in India.


Monday, August 28, 2017

Analysis of Financial inclusion for the differently-abled people

28.08.2017
Three years ago, from ramparts of the Red Fort Prime Minister Modi had spoken about financial inclusion which has since then successfully made a paradigm shift in banking penetration. Now, after opening new banking accounts for most households, we must move to the next stage where benefits should reach the silent majority of those individuals with disability.

• India, a signatory of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in effect from May 2008, has an obligation to comply to the convention which promotes, defends and reinforces human rights of the disabled.

• As the 10th year of compliance to one of the most comprehensive human right treaty of the 21st century approaches, India needs to take a look at its efforts for the disabled.

What is the status of differently abled?


• Disability refers to an individual who lacks abilities to perform an activity in the manner or within the range considered normal for a human being.

• The country has about 2.7 Crore people categorised as Persons with Disability (PwD).

• This mainly comprises of people with blindness, low vision, hearing impairment, locomotor disability, mental challenges and mental illness.

• Those with locomotor disability account for the largest share (20%) amongst the differently abled followed by those with visual and hearing disability.

• Nearly 69% of PwDs stay in rural areas.

• Only 1/3rd of this differently abled population are working out of which 31% are in agriculture.

• ILO claimed that around 75% of PwDs in India are still outside theworkforce.

• PwDs account for only 0.5% of total workforce in the organised sector.

NISH invites applications for diploma in Indian sign language and interpretation course

28.08.2017
The course, affiliated to the Rehabilitation Council of India aims at generating professional interpreters. This would also be helpful to teachers of the deaf to develop their sign language skills.

National Institute of Speech and Hearing (NISH) has invited applications from students with plus two qualifications for a one-year Diploma in Indian sign language and interpretation course.

The aspirants can fill the applications online through admissions@nish.ac.in on or before September 2. There are a total number of 15 seats in this course

As per an official release, preference will be given to graduates and those who are parents or siblings of deaf persons.

The course, affiliated to the Rehabilitation Council of India aims at generating professional interpreters. This would also be helpful to teachers of the deaf to develop their sign language skills.

The curriculum consists of theory and practical classes in sign language usage, cultural perspectives of the different approaches to deaf education and interpreting concepts and issues. The candidates admitted to the course will be trained to have a professional communicative competence in sign language and ability to interpret at a professional level in verbal languages and vice versa.

Those who apply for the course at NISH should have degree in any subject from any recognised university in India. The candidate should have obtained a minimum of 50 per cent of the aggregate (45 per cent in case of SC/ST candidates) in the plus two examination.

The candidate should have functional hands and hearing and should have verbal fluency in at least one language. For admission related queries, candidates can call at 0471-306- 6635.

CLICK HERE ⬇⬇
Diploma in Indian Sign Language: NISH invites applications

Training for Differently Abled Persons (Madurai)


The Differently Abled Welfare Office in Madurai district has announced that it would be arranging for English language and computer training to 50 physically challenged persons above 18 years of age.

A statement said that 40 persons with disabilities in their limbs and 10 visually impaired persons would be selected for the training.

Those who have completed Plus Two and possessing national identity card for differently abled or with 40 % or more disability in their limbs could apply for the training which will be provided through organisations chosen by the government. Interested persons can contact the District Differently Abled Welfare Office near Madurai Collectorate to apply for the training before August 31.

Sunday, August 27, 2017

செவித்திறன் குறையுடையோர் - பி.காம், பிசிஏ படிப்புகளில் கடும் பாதிப்பு – முதலமைச்சர் தலையிட கோரிக்கை

26.08.2017
மாநிலம் முழுவதும் +2 தேர்ச்சி பெறும் செவித்திறன் பாதித்த மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகளுக்கு அரசின் சார்பில் சென்னையிலுள்ள மாநிலக் கல்லூரியில் மட்டுமே பட்டப்படிப்புகள் உள்ளன.மாற்றுத்திறனாளி துறையால் செய்கைமொழி ஆசிரியர்களுடன் பி.காம்.,பி.சி.ஏ. படிப்புகள் 2007 முதல் இங்கு நடத்தப்படுகின்றன.

இந்த ஆண்டு, இப்படிப்புகளில் கடும் பாதிப்புகள் ஏற்பட்டு மாணவர்கள் மற்றும் ஆசிரியர்கள் சிரமத்துக்குள்ளாகி இருக்கும் செய்திகள் கிடைத்துள்ளன. இது விஷயத்தில் முதலமைச்சர் தலையிட்டு உரிய நடவடிக்கை எடுக்க எமது சங்கத்தின் சார்பில் கேட்டுக்கொள்கிறோம்.

அரசு மற்றும் தனியார் கல்லூரிகளில் வெவ்வேறு விதிமுறைகள் 

பிசிஏ எனப்படும் இளங்கலை கணினி பயன்பாட்டியல் படிப்பு 2007-ல் மாநிலக்கல்லூரியில் அரசின் சார்பில் துவக்கப்பட்டபோது +2-வில் கணிதத்தில் தேர்ச்சிபெற்றிருக்க வேண்டுமென்ற கட்டாயம் இல்லை. ஆனால், 2016-17 கல்வியாண்டு முதல் இது கட்டாயமாக்கப்பட்டதன் விளைவாக மாணவர் சேர்க்கை கடுமையாக பாதித்துள்ளது.

ஆக-31க்குள் சேர்க்கை முடிவடைகிற நிலையில் வெறும் 5 மாணவர்கள் மட்டுமே பிசிஏ படிப்புக்கு மாநிலக் கல்லூரியில் சேர்ந்துள்ளனர். அதிலும், சிலர் வெளியேற காத்திருக்கின்றனர்.

அதே வேளையில், அதிகக் கட்டணம் வசூலிக்கும் சென்னையிலுள்ள 2 தனியார் கல்லூரிகளில் இதே வகுப்புகளுக்கு கணிதத்தேர்ச்சி கட்டாயம் இல்லாமல் சேர்க்கை நடைபெறுகிறது. இதனால் 100 கணக்கான மாணவ-மாணவிகள் திருப்பி அனுப்பப்பட்டு அவர்களின் படிப்பும் வாழ்க்கையும் முடக்கப்படுகிறது.

சிறப்பு விடுதி ஏற்படுத்தித் தருக

மாநிலம் முழுவதும் இருந்து விடுதியை மட்டுமே நம்பி செவித்திறன் உள்ளிட்ட அனைத்து மாற்றுத்திறனாளி மாணவர்கள் மாநிலக்கல்லூரியில் பயில வருகின்றனார். ஆனால், மாநிலக் கல்லூரியில் செயல்பட்ட விக்டோரிய விடுதி பழுது காரணமாக மூடப்பட்டுவிட்டது பெரும் பாதிப்பை ஏற்படுத்தியுள்ளது. இதனால், மாணவர் சேர்க்கையும் குறைந்துள்ளது. எனவே, உடனடியாக மாற்றுத்திறனாளி மாணவர்களுக்கு தனியான சிறப்பு விடுதியை ஏற்படுத்தித்தர உத்தரவிட வேண்டும்.

போதிய ஆசிரியரும் இல்லை 5 மாதமாக சம்பளமும் இல்லை

இரண்டு பட்டப்படிப்புகளுக்கும் சேர்த்து 2 நிரந்தரம் மற்றும் 3 தொகுப்பூதிய ஆசிரியர்கள் என 5 ஆசிரியர்கள் மட்டுமே உள்ளனர். செய்கைமொழியுடன் பாடம் கற்பிக்கும் ஆசிரியர்கள் போதிய அளவில் கிடைக்காத நிலையில் பல ஆண்டுகளாக தொகுப்பூதியத்தில் பணியாற்றும் இந்த ஆசிரியர்களையும் நிரந்தரமாக்க வேண்டும்.

கடந்த 5 மாதங்களாக இந்த 3 தற்காலிக ஆசிரியர்களுக்கும் ரூ.10,000 மாத ஊதியம் வழங்கப்படவில்லை என்ற செய்தியும் அதிர்ச்சி அளிக்கிறது.

எனவே, மேற்கண்ட பிரச்சனைகளில் முதலமைச்சர் உரிய கவனம் செலுத்தி நடவடிக்கை எடுக்க கேட்டுக்கொள்கிறோம்.

(பா. ஜான்சிராணி) (தே. இலட்சுமணன்) (எஸ்.நம்புராஜன்)
மாநில தலைவர்-9444405645 மாநில துணை தலைவர மாநில பொதுச்செயலாளர்

Deaflympics Medal Winners Protest Against Govt



The Indian contingent of hearing impaired athletes for the Deaflympics that concluded in Turkey recently, had refused to leave the airport in New Delhi few days back as they were unhappy that there was no one around to recognize them or celebrate their success after they won five medals, including a gold, in the best showing ever for the country. The contingent is presently protest at Jantar Mantar, demanding equal rights, at par with para-athletes.

Friday, August 25, 2017

கணவர் வெறிச்செயல்: மாற்றுத்திறனாளி இரும்பு கம்பியால் அடித்து கொலை

24.08.2017
ஓசூர்: மாற்றுத்திறனாளி சங்கத்தின் முன்னாள் மாவட்ட தலைவரான சியாமளா என்ற மாற்றுத்திறனாளி பெண் அவரது கணவனால் அடித்து கொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்.

ஓசூர் சீதாராம்நகர் பகுதியை சேர்ந்தவர் சியாமளா. இவரது கணவர் நஞ்சுண்டசாமி இவர்களுக்கு இரண்டு பெண் குழந்தைகள் உள்ளனர்.

மாற்றுத்திறனாளியான சியாமளா தமிழ்நாடு அனைத்துவகை மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகள் மற்றும் பாதுகாப்போர் உரிமைகளுக்கான சங்கத்தின் கிருஷ்ணகிரி மாவட்ட முன்னாள் தலைவராக இருந்தார்.

சியாமளாவிற்கும் அவரது கணவர் நஞ்சுண்டசாமிக்கும் கருத்து வேறுபாடு காரணமாக அடிக்கடி தகறாறு ஏற்பட்டு வந்துள்ளதாக கூறப்படுகிறது.

இந்த நிலையில் கணவன் மனைவி இருவருக்கும் இடையே வாய்த்தகராறு ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது. அப்போது ஆத்திரமடைந்த நஞ்சுண்டசாமி சியாமளாவை இரும்பு கம்பியால் கடுமையாக தாக்கியுள்ளார்.

இதில் பலத்த காயமடைந்த சியாமளாவை அந்த பகுதியில் இருந்த பொதுமக்கள் மீட்டு ஒசூர் அரசு மருத்துவமனைக்கு அனுப்பி வைத்தனர்.

ஆனால் அங்கு அவர் சிசிச்சை பலனின்றி பரிதாபமாக உயிரிழந்தார்.

இதுகுறித்து விசாரணை நடத்திய போலீஸார், மனைவியை கொலை செய்த நஞ்சுண்டசாமியை கைது செய்தனர்.

இதனிடைய, இந்த சம்பவத்திற்கு மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகள் சங்கத்தினர் கடும் கண்டனம் தெரிவித்துள்ளனர்.

செப்.5 -இல் மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகள் ரத்த தானம்!


ஐடிஐ சேர்க்கைக்கு விண்ணப்பிக்கலாம்


மாற்றுத் திறனாளி மாணவர்கள் பல்வேறு பள்ளிகளில் பயிலும் மாணவர்களுடன் இணைந்து போட்டிகளில் கலந்துகொண்டனர்


சென்னை அடையாறு புனித லூயிஸ் காதுகேளாதோர் மற்றும் பார்வையற்றோர் மேனிலைப் பள்ளியில் பயிலும் மாற்றுத் திறனாளி மாணவர்கள் பல்வேறு பள்ளிகளில் பயிலும் மாணவர்களுடன் இணைந்து இசை, ஓவியம் உள்ளிட்ட போட்டிகளில் கலந்துகொண்டனர்.

Deaf athletes stage protest demanding equality in cash rewards, sports awards as given to Paralympians



The All India Sports Council of the Deaf staged a demonstration in New Delhi's Jantar Mantar demanding equality in cash rewards and sports awards as given to the Paralympians. The athletes stated that the Deaf Olympics are sanctioned by the International Olympic Committee and thus they should also be eligible for awards such as Arjuna Award and Khel Ratna Award.

Jaipur restaurant owner hires differently abled staff



A restaurant owner in Jaipur has hired differently abled staff. What makes this restaurant unique is that all the attendants here are hearing and verbally impaired.

In a one of its kind initiative, the restaurant owner in Jaipur is promoting social inclusion by hiring differently abled staff.

He has given place to deaf and mute people.

For the tourists visiting the Pink City for the first time, this restaurant is a unique experience.


Tuesday, August 22, 2017

New Café Geared Towards Deaf Patrons Opens in Bogotá, Colombia

At Sin Palabras Café Sordo, a trendy new watering hole in Bogotá, Colombia, patrons can dance, play games, enjoy exhibitions and performances, and grab a drink. But while ordering from the menu, they use their hands to communicate. Sin Palabras Café Sordo—which translates to No Words Deaf Café in English—is the South American nation’s first-ever bar designed to accommodate workers and customers with hearing impairments, according to The Nation.

Located in Bogotá's Chapinero neighborhood, Sin Palabras Café Sordo has both deaf servers and menus written in sign language. Customers sit at small tables and flick on a tiny lamp to signal a bartender over to order a drink. When patrons hit the dance floor, they’re greeted by large screens playing music videos with lyrics in sign language, and a pulsing floor that allows partiers to keep in time with the beat.

A trio of Bogotá entrepreneurs—Maria Fernanda Vanegas, Cristian Melo, and Jessica Mojica—teamed up to launch Sin Palabras Café Sordo in June 2017. None of these co-owners is deaf, but Vanegas told The Nation that their goal is “for us, people who can hear, to adapt to the deaf, and not the other way round, which is always the case.” Keeping with this theme, the bar has small cards to teach non-hearing-impaired customers some basic phrases in sign language. (Visitors who don’t know enough sign language to order off the menu can point to items they want, or write them down.)

Business has been so good for Sin Palabras Café Sordo that Vanegas and her co-owners might establish even more café locations around Colombia, according to Lonely Planet. That said, they aren’t the first ones to launch a business that caters to customers with hearing impairments: Granada, Nicaragua recently became home to Café de las Sonrisas(“Smiles Cafe”), a restaurant that employs only deaf cooks and servers, and similar establishments have opened in Canada and India. And in the U.S., there are restaurants like San Francisco’s deaf-owned and -operated pizzeria, Mozzeria.

சிறப்பு பயிற்சி மையம்: தன்னார்வ தொண்டு நிறுவனங்களுக்கு அழைப்பு




உதவித்தொகைக்கு விண்ணப்பிப்போர் பட்டியலை வட்டாட்சியர் அலுவலகங்களில் பொதுமக்கள் பார்வைக்கு வைக்க அரசு உத்தரவு


சமூகப்பாதுகாப்பு திட்டத்தின்கீழ் வட்டாட்சியர் அலுவலகங்களில் மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகளுக்கு மாத உதவித்தொகை வழங்குவதில் ஏற்படும் பல்வேறு சிக்கல்களை தடுப்பதற்கு மாற்றுத்திறனாளி சங்க பிரதிநிதிகளுடன் கலந்தாய்வுக் கூட்டம் தமிழக அரசின் சார்பில் இன்று சென்னையில் நடைபெற்றது.

தமிழக அரசின் முதன்மை செயலாளர் மற்றும் வருவாய் நிர்வாக ஆணையர் டாக்டர் கே. சத்யகோபால்,இஆப அவர்கள் தலைமையில் எழிலகத்தில் இன்று நடைபெற்ற கலந்தாய்வு கூட்டத்தில் மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகள் நல மாநில ஆணையர் திரு.ஆஷிஷ் குமார்,இஆப, சமூகப் பாதுகாப்புத்திட்ட இயக்குநர் திருமிகு சுதா தேவி,இஆப உள்ளிட்ட உயர் அதிகாரிகள் கலந்துகொண்டனர். தமிழ்நாடு அனைத்து அனைத்து வகை மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகள் மற்றும் பாதுகாப்போர் உரிமைகளுக்கான சங்கத்தின் சார்பில் மாநில தலைவர் ஜான்ஸிராணி, பொதுச்செயலாளர் எஸ்.நம்புராஜன் உள்ளிட்டோரும், டிசம்பர்-3 இயக்கத்தின் சார்பில் தலைவர் தீபக், தேசிய பார்வையற்றோர் இணைய இயக்குநர் மனோகரன், தமிழ்நாடு காதுகேளாதோர் கூட்டமைப்பின் மாநில தலைவர் ஜமால் அலி உள்ளிட்ட மாற்றுத்திறனாளி சங்க பிரதிநிதிகள் பங்கேற்றனர்.

கடந்த ஆக-10 அன்று தலைமை செயலகத்தில் சமூகநலத்துறை அமைச்சர் அவர்களுடன் நடைபெற்ற பேச்சுவார்த்தையின் தொடர்ச்சியாக அரசின் சார்பில் இக்கூட்டம் ஏற்பாடு செய்யப்பட்டது. மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகள் உதவித்தொகை பெறுவதில் மாநிலம் முழுவதும் உள்ள இடற்பாடுகளை தடுக்க மூன்று மாதங்களுக்கு ஒரு முறை இத்தகைய கலந்தாய்வு கூட்டங்களை வருவாய் நிர்வாக ஆணையர் தலைமையில் நடத்தவும் கூட்டத்தில் ஒப்புக்கொள்ளப்பட்டது. இதற்கு தமிழ்நாடு அனைத்து வகை மாற்றுத்திறனாளிகள் சங்கம் சார்பில் நன்றி தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டது.

முறைகேடுகளை தடுக்க மாநிலம் முழுவதும் உள்ள வட்டாட்சியர் அலுவலகங்களில் உதவித்தொகைக்காக விண்ணப்பிப்போர் பட்டியலை மக்கள் பார்வைக்கு வைக்கவும், மாவட்ட அரசு இணையதளங்களில் ஆன்லைனில் மாதந்தோறும் வெளியிடவும் உத்தரவு பிறப்பிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாக வருவாய் நிர்வாக ஆணையர் தெரிவித்தார். இது குறித்து மாவட்ட ஆட்சித்தலைவர்களுக்கு ஆக-18 தேதியிட்டு பிறப்பிக்கப்பட்டுள்ள உத்தரவு குறித்த கூடுதல் விபரம் பின்வருமாறு.

வட்டாட்சியர் அலுவலகங்களில் உதவித்தொகைக்காக விண்ணப்பிப்போரை வரிசைப்படி ஆவணத்தில் பதிவு செய்வதும், கண்டிப்பாக சீனியாரிட்டி அடிப்படையிலேயே உதவித்தொகைக்கான உத்தரவு வழங்க வேண்டும். மன நிலை பாதித்தோர், பார்வையற்றோர், வாய் பேசாதோர் உள்ளிட்ட மாற்றுத்திறனாளி பிரிவினர் இதுவரை விண்ணப்பித்து உதவித்தொகை வழங்கப்படாதவர்களின் படிவங்களை பரிசீலித்து உதவித்தொகை வழங்க வேண்டும். என்பன போன்ற உத்தரவுகள் வருவாய் நிர்வாக ஆணையரின் கடிதத்தில் வலியுறுத்தப்பட்டுள்ளது.

Centre asks Pb govt to extend support to hearing-impaired teen

18.08.2017
The Centre has asked the Punjab government to extend all support to city lad Yashveer Goyal who was first in the National IT Challenge for Youth with Disabilities' hearing-impaired category.

The 18-year-old is all set to represent India in the Global IT Challenge in Vietnam next month.

The Ministry of Social Justice Empowerment's Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities sent a letter on August 8 to the state government, asking it to extend all possible support to the teenager and his family, an official said.

The national IT competition was organised by the National Institute of Technology, Kurukushetra, on July 20 and 21 under the aegis of the Union ministry, and had e-designing, use of e-tools and creativity challenges.

The global challenge is slated to be held between September 18 and 22 at Hanoi in Vietnam. Four participants will represent India under different categories, the official said.

"We always wanted to make our child self-reliant and independent. He has made us proud with his achievement and interest for information and technology," the teenager's mother Nitu Goyal said.

She said that it was her dream that her child should not lead a dependent life but an independent and normal life like any other child.

Yashveer, who is pursuing his graduation from IGNOU, had scored 91 per cent marks in Class 12 examination.

Hearing-impaired from birth, he expressed his gratitude to his teachers, friends and family for the achievement and confidently added that he shall win and make India proud.

Monday, August 21, 2017

Haryana’s silent force conquering the world


Yadav’s record atthe Deaflympics
  • Gold in 2005 MelbourneIt was India’s first gold medal at the Deaflympics
  • Bronze in 2009 Taiwan
  • Gold in 2013 Bulgaria
  • Gold in 2017 Turkey
At World Championship
  • Silver in 2008 Armenia
  • Bronze in 2012. Bulgaria

Chandigarh, August 20
Goonga Pehalwan — this moniker may sound like a cruel joke, but in Haryana’s hinterland it signifies a silent force. The wrestling fanatics of the state identify it with an indomitable spirit. A spirit that has overcome physical disabilities, earned social respect, and inspired all those who wish to make a mark in life.

Virender Singh Yadav can neither hear nor speak but on the wrestling mat, his actions speak louder than words. Sasroli’s son of the soil is a three-time gold medallist in Deaflympics, has won almost every dangal across the country against the most celebrated wrestlers of his time. He has also won the silver medal (2008 Armenia) and bronze medal (2012 Bulgaria) in the World Deaf Wrestling Championship.

In the recent 23rd Deaflympics in Samsun, Turkey, Yadav’s gold in the 74kg category was the only gold medal for the country in its best-ever haul (5 medals) at the championships. Way back in 2005, as a 20-year-old he had won India the first gold in the Melbourne Deaflympics.

His wrestling achievements aside, the most striking quality about him is that despite being deaf and mute, he always has a cheerful attitude to life. Till recently, Yadav did not have a steady job but he never allowed financial constraints to cause bitterness in his life. “We have seen him like this from childhood, unmindful of his disability and ever-smiling,” said Mahinder Singh, Yadav’s cousin and training partner.

For his sporting excellence, Yadav was awarded the Arjuna Award on August 29, 2016. On that day the Who’s Who of Indian sport vied to get photographs clicked with him, and the self-effacing, shy pehalwan obliged all with a smile on his face.

Was this the most memorable day of his life? Maybe, though there have been other days of triumph. His international achievements year after year have brought him at par with the present Olympics medal winners of the country. Like them, he has the honour of being recognised by the Sports Minister, Prime Minister and President of India on different occasions.

All this did not happen in a flash, it took him more than a decade to get recognition from the society. It was his consistent performances in the face of adversity that convinced the world of his class. In 2001 as a 16-year-old, he won the trials for the World Cadet Wrestling Championships but the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) did not allow him to participate, despite the International Olympic Committee rules allowing deaf athletes to participate in the Olympics. WFI contended that since he was deaf and mute, he would not be able to follow the referee’s instructions properly.

Till the selection trials for the 2016 Rio Olympics, he was dead serious about giving it a try but it was not meant to be. All his life he has been competing with able-bodied wrestlers and rubbing shoulders with Olympics medallists Sushil Kumar and Yogeshwar Dutt at Chhatrasal Stadium in Delhi. “He can give any wrestler in his weight category a tough fight. He has a good technique and is a compact wrestler,” said Sushil Kumar.

Yadav was born in the home of wrestler-farmer Ajit Singh in Sasroli village of Jhajjar district on April 1, 1986. One year had passed and the family was still celebrating the birth of a son, their second child, after a daughter. Soon, however, the parents realised that the infant was mute and did not respond to any sound.

Five more years passed, but still the boy did not show any signs of improvement and fate’s cruel joke began to dawn on the family. Once, an infection in the boy’s leg prompted Ajit to ask his friend Surender Singh, another wrestler, to take the boy to a nearby hospital. On the way back home, Surender made a halt at a famous akhada of the area. The deaf-mute boy caught everyone’s fancy at the akhada and the folks at the akhada decided that the boy would remain there only, because “after all, what would he get in the village except taunts?”

“Since that day he never really came back home. From there he worked his way up to Chhatrasal Stadium,” said Ajit, explaining how difficult it was to ‘abandon’ a deaf-mute child among complete strangers. But such is the trust of the village folk in the akhada culture that the family hardly needed any convincing.

At the akhada, the jolly-natured albino child soon became one with the inmates. But before he could learn the dauv-pech of mitti ki kushti, it was the cardinal principle of the survival of the fittest that got naturally ingrained in him in the akhada.

No wonder the boy retained his verve and bounced back by the time he reached adolescence. In the 2001 Nationals in Haridwar, he won the gold that guaranteed selection for the World Cadet Wrestling Championships. However, WFI backtracked from the well-set norm of sending the winner, saying that the deaf-mute boy would only waste a precious opportunity in an international competition. “Haare hue ladke ko bheja, isko nahi,” said the father, the hurt of denial still evident in his voice 16 years after that incident.

As of today, Yadav is among the top wrestlers in traditional mud-wrestling.

Wrestling coach Virender Singh, who has trained a few physically challenged wrestlers at Jhajjar, says, “In comparison to other wrestlers he is very sharp and intelligent. He picks up moves quicker than others.”

Yadav was one of the very few athletes in the Deaflympics contingent who were at ease with the Indian and international sign language. Yadav’s effort is remarkable, especially in an Olympics sport like wrestling where a grappler has to make a move in split seconds. Often a wrestler who makes the first move is at an advantage. Yadav struggles on the mat as the referee gives instructions and communicates the award of points through a whistle. Yadav, thus, must keep a constant eye on the referee to keep a tab on the scoring, which is a great distraction for a wrestler.

While the referees in the Deaflympics use light and hand signals to communicate with the athletes, it is often done through a tap of a referee’s hand on the wrestler’s back in dangals back home.

The 32-year-old is a shining example of how an individual with meagre resources can harness innate talent to re-write destiny. Yadav’s consistent success at the international level has made him a known name now even though the financial constraints have not vanished completely. Having worked as a clerk in the Haryana State Electricity Board, he is now employed as a coach in the Haryana Sports Department for able-bodied wrestlers in Karnal.

“He has won medals, earned name and fame. He has a steady job with a decent salary now. It’s time we found a suitable girl for him and solemnised his marriage,” Ajit revealed his family’s future plans.

Goonga Pehalwan documentary

The documentary has been directed by Mit Jani, Prateek Gupta and Vivek Chaudhary, and produced by Drishti Media. The film is the winner of the 62nd National Film Award for the year 2014 under Best Debut Film of a Director (Non-Feature) Category. The film was selected as the Opening Film of the Indian Panorama at the International Film Festival of India in Goa. Goonga Pehalwan received a special mention at the International Documentary and Short Film, Kerala, 2014.

Haryana athletes excel in Deaflympics 2017

The Indian contingent participated in a total of eight disciplines at the 2017 Deaflympics. Out of those eight disciplines, India won medals in three — gold and bronze in wrestling, bronze in lawn tennis and silver in golf. Jhajjar’s Virender Singh Yadav clinched the gold in 74kg freestyle event, while two other Haryana wrestlers, Sumit Dahiya and Ajay Kumar, bagged a bronze each. Haryana golfer Diksha Dagar won silver in the women’s individual event. Prithvi Sekhar and Jafreen Shaik won bronze in men’s doubles tennis.

Deaf and dumb student dies of burn injuries

Berhampur (Odisha), Aug 20 (PTI) A five-year-old deaf and dumb student, who had suffered burn injuries when hot curry fell on him at a school hostel, has died. A thorough inquiry has been ordered into the incident.

Bishnu Prasad Sahu of Purushottampur, who sustained around 50 per cent burn injuries when hot curry served by the cook fell on him in the hostel on August 13, succumbed to injuries at SCB Medical College and Hospital at Cuttack last night, officials said.

Sub-Collector of Berhampur S S Swain, who is the secretary of the school management committee, today ordered a thorough inquiry into the incident. Initially a preliminary inquiry was conducted into the incident and as the child died, a thorough probe will be conducted again by the sub divisional social welfare officer, Swain said.

"We will take action against the persons who are found guilty,? he said.

He also said, the parents of the boy would be provided compensation as per provision.

The boy had joined Level 1 at the Helen Keler Red Cross School for the Deaf at Ambapua near here, in April this year to study Indian sign language as he was deaf and dumb.

The headmaster of the school was not available for his comment. Over 100 students are in the hostel of the 36-year-old residential school which runs classes from Level 1 to Class 10.

I was the only deaf student in a classroom – here’s how Indian schools are wasting our potential

19.08.2017
Schools enforce hearing-aids on younger deaf children and force them to learn by speaking instead of using sign language.

When I was 18, I applied to go to college. I was fairly sure I’d be given admission, especially because I had decent grades. Imagine my surprise when the principal of the college I’d applied to refused to give me admission. When I asked why, I was told that he expected me to fail and bring shame to the college. Why? Because I am deaf. Anger does not begin to explain what I felt that day.

In a society that upholds conventional hearing as the norm, deaf people have to deal with many such situations. Oralism, an ideology and practice that pushes for communication that is based only on speech, is encouraged from a really young age. As a result, we negotiate constantly with schools, colleges, workspaces, bureaucracies and families that don’t acknowledge our preference for sign language over oral languages.

I identify as both Deaf and deaf. Deaf  – with a capital D  –  represents my involvement with deaf networks, relationships and sign language. But I also identify as deaf as I interact with the hearing world, a world that does not acknowledge my identity and communication needs.

Reading the signs

My Deaf identity comes with a sense of community with other deaf people, and I wear it with pride. The hearing world, on the other hand, tries to reduce us to people whose defining feature is not being able to “hear”  –  a medical diagnosis.

Not respecting the importance of sign language in deaf people’s lives greatly affects every aspect of our existence. It hinders our education, our job prospects, and daily communication. Indian Sign Language is a language in its own right, with its own style, grammar, and syntax, and it should be recognised as one.

The costs of not doing so are heavy  –  immense amounts of Deaf potential is hidden because of communication barriers. The hearing world must understand how central sign language is to us, as it is our only accessible means of communication.
Children from the Deaf Biblical Ministry perform an action song on
World Deaf Day at Dimapur, in the north eastern state of Nagaland.
 
Unfortunately, this isn’t at all acknowledged. The dominance of oralism means that, for instance, schools enforce hearing-aids on younger deaf children and force them to learn by speaking. This approach to education is a huge barrier that I and countless other deaf people have personally experienced.

As you can imagine, the first few years of school were difficult for me. I went to a deaf school where we had to try to listen to the teacher speaking, write down answers, and learn them. This was not an effective method at all as we were forced to lip-read the instructions.

I moved to a hearing school at the age of 13 because my teacher at the deaf school refused to let me move from my class to the next one, not because I had done anything wrong, but because I was the only student in my batch and if I stayed behind I could join a batch of four students next year! This was unacceptable to my mother – a teacher herself. She moved me to a hearing school where I was the only deaf student in the classroom.

I used to be very worried about talking to my hearing classmates; I just didn’t have the confidence for it. As for the classes, I did not understand anything we were being taught. I coped with it by copying everything from the classmate who would sit next to me and having my family explain everything to me after I got home from school.

This is how much deaf children struggle in any kind of school. They are not taught sign language in “special schools” and mainstream schools almost never admit them anyway. Even when they do, they never make time to accommodate deaf students’ use of sign language.

What can make things better for us at this most basic level? Quite simply, we need deaf teachers. Hearing teachers should fully know sign languageor be bilingual (in both sign and speech). Interpreters should be made available in mainstream hearing schools.
Hello spelled out in British Sign Language.

Greater sensitivity

In my case, even getting an interview for a job at a company proved tricky. The Human Resources department wasn’t sure how we could communicate. My sister helped with this but once I got the job, there were day-to-day issues even with basic communication.

The solution I was able to find was for the company to type out instructions on the computer for me to follow. I had a good experience with this company, but there were certainly many opportunities I missed out on, that hearing people could easily access. For example, I and my deaf colleagues weren’t able to attend a work-related conference  –  even though we were given a briefing later, it was just not the same.

Things aren’t just difficult in public spaces  –  home can also be a challenging space. I have a very supportive family that treats me with respect and understands my Deaf identity, but the same is not true for most deaf people.

I once had a friend whose family only talked to him and never bothered to learn sign language. They even used to make phone calls to him rather than messaging or texting him. How would he know what they are saying?

What helps us deal with these challenges is the fact that Deaf people have tight-knit communities all over India. We share similar experiences, struggles, challenges, and hence we are all connected. There is politics too, but that is true of all communities.

These bonds are nurtured and valued primarily because of our love and attachment to sign language and the common experiences of joy as well as oppression that we have to face.
Indian Sign Language program for deaf school.

Glimmer of hope

Our strong sense of community and need for justice has led deaf people to make efforts on many levels and I do believe that things are getting better for us. Today the Rights of People with Disabilities Act in India talks about accessible education, the need for sign language interpreters, equal opportunities in education and employment. The setting up of Indian Sign Language Research and Training Centre has been a step in the right direction too.

The Deaf community is very diverse and vibrant. We count Deaf, deaf, Hard of Hearing, Deafblind, and Deaf people with multiple disabilities (though these disabilities are rarely recognised) among our numbers. It’s important to remember that each person within this community has unique experiences.

When I was younger, I knew of people who were ashamed of sign language. This is obviously because they and their families never thought that being deaf is something one can be proud of.

Today I see this changing a little bit, but by and large, people still look at disability from a lens of sympathy. We would prefer to be approached with empathy, as well as be given access to equal opportunities, and a life of dignity.
An Indian child with impaired hearing looks at the view
from a tethered helium balloon in Ahmedabad.
 
As told to Shruti Vaidya, interpreted by Atiya Hajee. Mohd. Aqil Hajee is Deaf. He founded Leadership Empowerment Education of the Deaf (LEED) in Pune where he trained deaf people in English grammar. He loves long drives, watching movies, and hanging out with friends. Shruti Vaidya is a PhD student at the University of Chicago. She works in the field of Deaf and Disability studies. Atiya Hajee is a professional sign language interpreter and the General Secretary of the Indian Sign Language Interpreters Association. This article first appeared on Skin Stories.

Thursday, August 17, 2017

ANDHRA PRADESH: 5-YEAR-OLD DEAF AND MUTE BABY ORPHANED AS POOR PARENTS END LIVES

17.08.2017
Hyderabad: In a heart-wrenching tragedy, parents of a five-year-old deaf and dumb girl committed suicide by jumping into a local canal, rendering her an orphan. The couple is said to have resorted to the extreme being unable to meet the expenses for the baby's treatment.

The baby is temporarily under the care and protection of her paternal grandparents, who conveyed to the police their inability to take care of her for long.

The tragic incident took place in Gubbalavaripalem village of Kothapet block in Andhra's East Godavari district on Sunday night. The police retrieved the body of mother Bhavani on Monday morning but, the father Komaju Srinivas, aged 35, remains to be traced.

According to the relatives, Srinivas and Bhavani left home late Sunday evening to take their daughter Tejaswani to hospital for treatment. Tejaswani was born deaf and mute and was also not able to walk on her own.

As the bike was crossing a canal, Bhavani suddenly got down and jumped into the canal. Immediately, Srinivas parked the bike aside, made Tejaswani sit on the roadside and jumped into the canal too. "The baby and the family told us that he had jumped to rescue her. But, we did not find any eye witnesses", Kothapet station house officer B Vijaya Kumar told Mirror.

Passersby saw the girl crying alone beside the bike and enquired her. From her signs, they realised that both her parents had jumped into the canal. Some of the villagers identified the girl as the daughter of Srinivas and took her to her house, where the neighbours identified her.

SI Kumar further said, "We initially registered a case of couple missing. Today, we altered it to death under suspicious circumstances (Criminal Procedure Code section 174). An investigation is underway."

Srinivas was working as a sports teacher in a private school. He married Bhavani in an inter-caste marriage six years ago.

A pal of gloom descended on the village while disturbing scenes prevailed at the house where speechless Tejaswani was banging her head against the wall and on the floor in grief.

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

14-year-old hearing and speech impaired rape victim delivers baby girl in Jalandhar

16.08.2017
A 14-year-old hearing and speech impaired pregnant girl, who was allegedly raped by her neighbour at Kang Sabu village in Nakodar, delivered a premature baby girl at Shaheed Babu Labh Singh Civil Hospital last week.

Health officials said the bay is underweight at 1.5 kg and the mother is unable to feed her. Auxiliary nurse midwife (ANM) Paramjeet Kaur, who is looking after the minor girl since the crime came to notice, told Hindustan Times that baby is gaining weight. She said the baby is being fed by her aunt. She regularly visits the victim’s house to monitor the mother and baby’s health.

Nakodar deputy superintendent of police (DSP) Mukesh Kumar said they have received the information about the girl’s delivery and have asked the doctors for DNA samples to match with that of the accused, Shiv Paswan, 40, who is lodged in the Kapurthala jail. The girl’s family is planning to hand over the baby to an orphanage.

The girl was allegedly raped by Paswan, a labour contractor, when her parents had gone for work. The father took the girl to a nearby doctor after the victim’s married sister, who had come to meet her parents, noticed her bulged abdomen. During her examination on April 26 this year, it was confirmed that she was over five-month pregnant. The daily wager filed a complaint with the police, which with the help of experts and family, got to know about the accused, who was living in the adjoining house.

The accused was arrested the next day based on the girl’s statement. A case under Sections 376 (rape) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and 3, 4 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, was registered against the accused.

Following an HT report highlighting the family’s woes in these columns on May 8, district and family welfare officer Dr Gurmeet Kaur Duggal ordered health workers to bring the victim to the hospital and ensure her medication till the delivery.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

PM Modi, Lalu & Kejriwal? There’s a Sign for Everyone!



India is home to over 60 million hearing impaired people. Few in our country know sign language, and fewer still understand it. This reduces opportunities, limits conversations and experiences for those with different hearing abilities.

On Independence day, The Quint reached out to students of Noida Deaf Society, in an attempt to give them a platform to express their love for the language. They gave us a crash course in sign language too!

Cameraperson: Abhay Sharma

Video Editor: Rahul Sanpui

(Love your mother tongue? This Independence Day, tell The Quint why and how you love your bhasha. You may even win a BOL t-shirt! Sing, write, perform, spew poetry – whatever you like – in your mother tongue. Send us your BOL at bol@thequint.com or WhatsApp it to 9910181818.)

India at 70: Virender Singh brought India 3 golds but can’t afford a house

In 2016, Singh was awarded the Arjuna Award, 
one of the country’s highest sporting honours.
15.08.2017
The deaf and mute wrestler is an Arjuna awardee after years of toil and global recognition but still doesn’t earn enough to give himself a comfortable life.

2017 Gold Medal, Samsun, Turkey

2016 Gold Medal, Tehran, Iran

2013 Gold Medal, Sofia, Bulgaria

2012 Bronze Medal, Sofia, Bulgaria

2009 Bronze Medal, Taipei, Taiwan

2008 Silver Medal, Yerevan, Armenia

2005 Gold Medal, Melbourne, Australia

One of India’s most accomplished wrestlers makes Rs. 28,000 per month as a junior coach. He has won seven international medals, including three golds. But he cannot afford a house or a car.

He shares a bare, cramped room with four single beds, a wire to hang clothes, a wooden shelf with shoes and a big ledge for all his trophies. The room is inside a small akhada next to a noisy railway line in the heart of Delhi’s Sadar bazaar market.

Meet Virender Singh, 32, popularly known as Goonga Pehelwan. He can’t hear or speak.

Virender has wrestled not only opponents on the mat but also with odds through meticulous rigour, personal sacrifice and tremendous talent. But his remarkable story is also an indictment of state apathy and sporting federations, who’ve failed to adequately support talent of differently abled sportsmen.

Short and stocky, Virender is smiling as he talks in sign language, even while describing his travails. “Main sun nahi sakta, na bol sakta hoon, par iska yeh matlab nahi ki meri koi sunvayi hi na ho. (I can’t hear or speak. But that should not mean that my story should not be heard),” he says with hurried gestures.

Born in Jhajjar district’s Sasroli village, Virender never went to school because of his impairment. There was no avenue to teach him, or his family, sign language and this often meant Singh went unaided. At the age of 10, his father Ajay Singh, a wrestler who worked for the Central Industrial Security Force, brought him to Delhi for treatment of a foot injury. On the advice of a friend, Ajay admitted Virender to a school for the hearing and speech impaired. At the same time, the young boy also started training under his father and uncle.

Waking up before the crack of dawn followed by a punishing 8-hour workout schedule, no vice and a single-minded focus has been Virender’s life ever since. He won his first gold at the 2005 Deaflympics in Australia, where he had to spend Rs. 70,000 out of his own pocket. But the win did not make things easier or bring the recognition his feat deserved.

At that time, there was no government provision for cash awards for differently abled sport stars. So, while other Olympic winners received more than Rs. 5 crore from various governments, states and sports associations – Virender received almost nothing for years.
Through these years, with no other avenue of income or support from the government, Virender had to resort to participating in village dangals to support himself. A win would get him between Rs. 5000- Rs. 20,000. It meant frequent travels to far-off villages in Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Punjab, on buses and trains. Occasionally, there would not even be prize money, only fare reimbursement.

Singh signals, “If I could speak, I would have fought for the rights of sportspeople like me.” In 2013, three young film makers, shocked at the sorry state of things, produced a documentary on him. It won wide acclaim and helped bring much-needed attention on Singh. Finally, as late as 2015, the sports policy was amended to make speech-impaired winners eligible for government cash prizes. Still, they get only a fifth of the money as compared to able-bodied sportspersons.

In 2016, Singh was awarded the Arjuna Award, one of the country’s highest sporting honours.

“Still, most people in the country don’t know me,” he rues. Singh has just returned triumphant from another Deaflympics in Turkey, where he won gold. India won 4 medals – gold and bronze in wrestling, silver in golf and bronze in lawn tennis – its best-ever performance.

But the contingent returned home to ignominy. No one from the sports federation or the sports ministry was at the airport to receive them, as is the norm. Singh shakes his head signalling, “I raised India’s prestige internationally with my win but here no one cares.” But heartbreak has always co-existed with hope in his story. “Whether someone watches or not, I have done my work.”

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Government Orders for Persons with Disabilities

Indian Government Orders, Acts and Rules, Circulars, Notification, Reservations, Age Concession, Concessions, Allowances, Facilities and Court Judgements for Persons with Disabilities

DATE
DEPARTMENT
G.O / H.O / G.C /
TITLE
20/06/2017
DoPT
Office Memorandum
15/06/2017
MoSJE
Gazette of India ( Act & Rules)
19/04/2017
MoSJE
Gazette of India ( Act & Rules)
10/03/2017
MoSJE
Gazette of India ( Act & Rules)
17/01/2017
MoFDE
Office Memorandum
28/12/2016
MoLJ
Gazette of India (Act & Rules)
11/03/2016
DoPT
Cirucullar
17/11/2015
DoPT
Office Memorandum
30/07/2015
DoPE
Office Memorandum
29/06/2015
DoPT
Office Memorandum
22/05/2015
DoPT
Office Memorandum
22/05/2015
DoPT
Office Memorandum
19/05/2015
DoPT
Office Memorandum
12/05/2015
DoPT
Office Memorandum
19/03/2015
RBI
Office Memorandum
25/02/2015
DoPE
Office Memorandum
17/02/2015
MoFDE
Office Memorandum
06/02/2015
DoPT
Office Memorandum
06/01/2015
DoPT
Office Memorandum
28/06/2014
MoFDE
Office Memorandum
06/06/2014
DoPT
Office Memorandum
11/04/2014
MoFDFS
Office Memorandum
31/03/2014
DoPT
Office Memorandum
19/02/2014
MoFDE
Office Memorandum
15/06/2013
DoPT
Office Memorandum
01/01/1995
MoLJ
Gazette of India ( Act & Rules)