Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Bedi relieved after release, leaves for Punjab
"I got justice and I thank God who heard my prayers," said Bedi, who stepped out at 7.45 am from jail with a smiling face. She was lodged in the jail since November 12, 2005.
"I am happy and I thank God," she said.
When asked about her future plans, a beaming starlet and companion of underworld don Abu Salem, said "I want to spent some time with my family in my native place in Hoshiyarpur in Punjab. Later, I will decide about my future."
The Special CBI court in Hyderabad had granted bail to her on Tuesday but her release was delayed for a day.
Bedi left for Punjab via Delhi along with his father Prem Bedi.
Abducted Satyam Computers executive rescued
Satyanarayana was kept in a house at Nekkonda village in Warangal district and was rescued late Tuesday night, police sources said.
Police located the area of his confinement with the help of mobile phone signals, sources said.
Satyanarayana (40), General Manager of Satyam Associate Insurance Verticle, was kidnapped by four unidentified persons when he was on his way to drop his kids to school in East Maredpally area of Secunderabad on Tuesday.
He is being brought to the city, sources said. However, the City Police Commissioner Balwinder Singh, when contacted, refused to either confirm or deny the rescue of the official.
Govt's lesson: Talk sex, but mind your language
After HRD Ministry’s ambitious National Adolescent Education Programme (NAEP) ran into trouble in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh, the Government was forced to tone down the content of the course manual.
Even the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) steered clear of using “explicit” words in the teachers’ manual of sex education to ward off potential objection from any quarters.
While topics like arousal, masturbation, ejaculation, intercourse and teenage pregnancy have been deleted from the teacher’s manual, diagrams and posters that describe the passage from puberty to adulthood - and were the cause of uproar - have also been done away with.
But the programme, currently being field-tested in 7,000 schools across the country, isn't all about sex.
As CNN-IBN found out, it also deals with topics as diverse as drug abuse and facial hair.
While strong reactions from teachers, especially in Punjab and UP, may have prompted the Board to water down the handbook, the revised version has been designed to ensure that the entire programme is not scrapped.
It's, of course, a totally different matter that most teenagers are pretty up-to-date as far as sexual terminology goes and the “distasteful” diagrams are no more explicit than the ones in their biology textbooks.
So, does such government censorship make sense in the age of Internet, mass media, child sex abuse and AIDS?
More importantly, is sex education meaningless without the use of explicit words? This was the big debate on CNN-IBN show Face the Nation conducted by Sagarika Ghose.
On the panel to debate the issue were Committee Member, National Adolescent Education Programme and Consultant Psychiatrist, VIMHANS, Dr Jitendra Nagpal,
Janaki Rajan, Professor, Jamia Milia Islamia and former BJP MP, B P Singhal.
Words that are wrong
For the NCERT Central Board for Secondary Education words like arousal, intercourse and teenage pregnancies are wrong. The words have been dropped from the adolescence education manual for fear that some might find them objectionable.
The BJP is constantly saying that sex education will lead create an immoral society, will lead to single parenthood, and other moral problems. But what is the problem with those, which are only descriptive words?
“The problem is at what age are these words given to children,” said Singhal.
When told that in an age of Internet and mass media, a child can get them online, Singhal remarked, “A 10-year-old can also learn to make a bomb on the Internet. But that doesn’t mean we teach him to do that.”
He felt the best way of imparting sex education is from a mother to a daughter and from a father to a son.
But Janaki Rajan held an opposing view and said there was a strong politics of sexuality.
“One of the major ways in which traditional societies control behaviour of the young is by taboos. This is just a continuation of that mind set,” she observed.
Kalam shares the nostalgia
He is leaving Raisina Hill as the people's President and says he has had no regrets. In an exclusive interview to CNN-IBN Editor-in-Chief Rajdeep Sardesai – his last as president – A P J Abdul Kalam speaks of his five years as the first citizen.
Rajdeep Sardesai: President Kalam, I want to start with the herbal garden because, in a sense, it typifies how you have changed the Rashtrapati Bhavan. You got musical fountains, herbal gardens and biodiversity parks – what was the purpose?
A P J Abdul Kalam: It’s people’s Bhavan, they must be proud of this place.
Rajdeep Sardesai: But people have no access to Rashtrapati Bhavan…
A P J Abdul Kalam: No, a million people visit Rashtrapati Bhavan every year.
Rajdeep Sardesai: You don’t think Rashtrapati Bhavan has become somewhat colonial? Most people think, ‘How do I reach the President of India? He is far away, a distant person.’
A P J Abdul Kalam: They e-mail, they reach here, or they write a letter and get here.
Rajdeep Sardesai: Do you think modern India needs institutions like a President or the Presidency?
A P J Abdul Kalam: In 1950, our Constitution was written and approved. Okay? It has withstood so far. So, how can I say if it (Presidency) is needed or not?
Rajdeep Sardesai: What I found interesting is that you seem to have changed Presidency rather than Presidency changing you. You don’t seem to be interested in protocol too much. You did what you thought was best for the country. Would that be fair?
A P J Abdul Kalam: See, Presidency required me to do certain tasks. Also, I have seen that as a President, it’s easy to do any innovation one wants in Rashtrapati Bhavan or even in nation. Nobody will stop you.
Rajdeep Sardesai: As you demit office, do you have regrets or a sense of fulfillment?
A P J Abdul Kalam: I found President is a way of thinking. If he thinks big, he can definitely make the nation. For example, take the India 2020 vision.
Rajdeep Sardesai: Let me ask you, do you see yourself as retiring now or are you going back to your first love which is teaching?
A P J Abdul Kalam: I think retirement is a continuous process.
Rajdeep Sardesai: Sir, we are in the 60th year of Indian independence. What is your message to Indians?
A P J Abdul Kalam: One great message is that India and its people should be self-confident and say, ‘We can do it.’