Goodness Apple

Differently-abled persons get aid at Collectorate

Posted in Humanity by goodnessapple on July 6, 2010

MADURAI: Differently-abled persons received aid at the grievances redressal day meeting at the Collectorate on Monday.

Collector C. Kamaraj distributed instruments to three beneficiaries, valued at Rs. 30,000 each. The Chief Minister had recently instructed the authorities to ensure that the needy received quality and modern gadgets.

For special school

A cheque for Rs. 30,000 was given to the Bethsan Special School as grant. Assistant Collector (Training) N. Venkatesan, District Revenue Officer Dinesh Ponraj Oliver and District Differently-Abled Welfare Officer Kanagaraj, Public Reraltions Officer S. S. Saravanan among others participated, a release said.

Centre helps young people with problems

Posted in Enterprising by goodnessapple on June 22, 2010

Tough realities tackled on the shores of Loch Lomond

Chris Clancey

Chris Clancey said he would have ended up in jail had he not done the course

A new centre for working with young people from ‘tough realities’ has opened on the banks of Loch Lomond.

The organisation Columba 1400, which already has a training centre on Skye, will run projects from the new site.

To help finance the youth development work, the building will also be rented out to firms and corporations.

Columba 1400’s patron, the Princess Royal, officially opened the centre, with several graduates also in attendance.

Chris Clancey, from Clydebank, has been to Skye to do the Columba 1400 programme twice.

When talking about his life before, he simply said: “Alcohol, drinking, gang fighting.”

When asked how different he thought his life would have been had he not completed the programme, he replied: “I’m sure at one point I would have ended up in jail.”

Martyn Aitken

Martyn Aitken plans to one day have his own business

Laura Galbraithe explained what the organisation meant when they said many of the young people came from ‘tough realities’.

“Largely the kind of difficulties have been around poverty and sometimes drugs or alcohol, either their own recovery or it’s something that’s been in their families,” she said.

Another Columbia 1400 graduate Martyn Aitken from Hamilton said: “I was a mess, I just had no plans, I didn’t care”.

Since the course, he has since completed a HND and has plans to go to university and to one day have his own business.

Ms Galbraithe said: “We’d be hoping here that we would be concentrating on perseverance, keeping anything good that you’ve developed about yourself going back into your community and making sure that whatever you do you’re achieving more and more and more both for yourself and for the community.”

Reference Link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_west/10371491.stm

Courtesy
BBC News

Smart clothes offer emotional aid

Posted in Business by goodnessapple on June 5, 2010

Smart clothes could soon be helping their wearers cope with the stresses of modern life.

The prototype garments monitor physiological states including temperature and heart rate.

The clothes are connected to a database that analyses the data to work out a person’s emotional state.

Media, including songs, words and images, are then piped to the display and speakers in the clothes to calm a wearer or offer support.

Created as part of an artistic project called Wearable Absence the clothes are made from textiles woven with different sorts of wireless sensors. These can track a wide variety of tell-tale biological markers including temperature, heart rate, breathing and galvanic skin response.

Data is gathered passively and used to trigger a response from a web-based database previously created by the wearer. The clothes connect to the web via a smartphone.

When the wearer is detected as being in a particular emotional state, the database will send media to the clothes to help try to change a person’s mood

To accomplish this, the clothes are fitted with display made of LEDs and have speakers built in to the hood. The display can show scrolling text or simple images and the speakers can replay music, sounds or pre-recorded messages from friends or family.

Developed by Barbara Layne from Concordia University in Canada and Janis Jefferies from Goldsmiths College’s Digital Studios, the prototype garments were shown at the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences held in Montreal from 28 May – 3 June.

Earlier work by Professor Layne created jackets that knew when their owners were touching and changed the messages being displayed on the LED displays sewn into them.

Reference Link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/10236143.stm

Courtesy
BBC News

Manufacturers of devices for persons with disability to get help

Posted in Enterprising, Healthcare, Humanity by goodnessapple on June 1, 2010

Presentation on ‘The world initiative for the blind’


Chief Secretary K.S. Sripathi inspects a device to assist persons with disability at the presentation on ‘The world initiative for the blind’ in Chennai on Sunday. Chairman of the Board of Governors of IIT, Kanpur, M. Anandakrishnan is in the picture.

CHENNAI, INDIA: The Tamil Nadu Industrial Investment Corporation will assist any entrepreneur manufacturing devices that support persons with disability, Chief Secretary K.S. Sripathi said here on Sunday.

Speaking at a presentation on ‘The world initiative for the blind,’ he said: “The government has announced schemes that provide technological support to the disabled in this budget. We will definitely welcome entrepreneurs if they come forward.”

The presentation was by public charitable trust, Vidya Vrikshah, Worth Trust, the International Institute of Social Entrepreneurs and the Rotary Club of East R.A. Puram.

Chairman of the Board of Governors of Indian Institute of Technology – Kanpur, M. Anandakrishnan stressed the need for hardware-related content development by such entrepreneurs for helping persons with disability.

The Rotary Club of East R.A. Puram will distribute 1,000 more universal Braille kits to visually impaired children shortly.

“It is a social responsibility to bring literacy and education for the blind,” said K.V.S. Gopalakrishnan, managing trustee of Vidya Vrikshah.

Mainstream schools are unwilling to admit visually impaired students as they do not have the skills or equipment to teach them, said N. Krishnaswamy, chairman of Vidya Vrikshah.

At the function, Mr. Sripathi inaugurated the first mobile blind school in Vellore district as part of the initiative.

Madurai and Cuddalore will get similar facilities soon.

Reference Link :

http://www.hindu.com/2010/06/01/stories/2010060159680400.htm

Courtesy:

The Hindu

Collector hands over aid worth Rs.22.56 lakh

Posted in Social by goodnessapple on May 11, 2010

VELLORE: Vellore Collector C. Rajendran distributed cheques for financial assistance worth Rs.22.56 lakh to 131 beneficiaries at the weekly public grievances redressal day meeting held at the Collectorate here on Monday.

The assistance comprised Rs.1,02,500 each to seven beneficiaries for deaths due to accidents and funeral expenses and Rs.1.45 lakh to 12 persons for natural death in family and weaker sections relief under the social protection scheme, marriage assistance of Rs.20,000 each to 61 beneficiaries under the Moovalur Ramamirtham Ammayar Memorial Scheme and marriage assistance to 11 beneficiaries under the E.V.R. Maniyammayar Memorial Scheme and similar assistance to two inter-caste couples under the Anjugam Ammayar Memorial Scheme through the Department of Social Welfare and artificial limbs worth Rs.1.07 lakh to five differently-abled persons through the Department of Differently-Abled Rehabilitation.

Free house site pattas

Mr. Rajendran also distributed free house site ‘pattas’ to 10 persons belonging to Ambur taluk and family cards to 14 persons through the Department of Civil Supplies and Consumer Protection.

The Collector, who received 849 petitions from the public on the occasion, directed the officials concerned to take immediate action on the petitions. A. Saravanavelraj, District Revenue Officer; Saroja Thiruvengadam, District Social Welfare Officer; Bhoopathi, District Supply Officer; Ponnusamy, Revenue Divisional Officer Vellore; Dharmasekhar, Special Deputy Tahsildar (Colour Television) and M. Vijayakumar, District Information and Public Relations Officer, participated in the meeting.

Reference Link
http://www.hindu.com/2010/05/11/stories/2010051151960300.htm

Courtesy
The Hindu

Extending a helping hand to the needy

Posted in Humanity by goodnessapple on April 28, 2010

Good Samaritans rescue orphans – Photo: MOHD. ARIF

Timely help: Collector Suresh Kumar and Zilla Parishad Chairman Balaiah handing over a cheque for Rs. 5,000 to Srikanth and Swapna in Sangareddy. Also seen is teacher

SANGAREDDY: Three men at different levels – a teacher, Collector and the Zilla Parishad chairman – made a difference in the life of two orphan children. The role played by the teacher culminated in promising a colourful future for them.

When K. Srikanth was studying in class IV and his sister, Swapna in studying class VIII, tragedy struck them one after another in the past four months. Though they belong to Muddapur in Papannapet mandal, the family migrated to Hyderabad to make a living as labourers.

On the New Year day, the children lost their mother, Pochamma, due to ill health. Heart-broken over the loss of better half, their father, Kishtaiah, also breathed his last breath on April 15, leaving the children alone.

U. Narasimhulu, a teacher of the same village who attended the funeral of both the wife and husband, decided to extend a helping hand to the children. The information was passed on to Zilla Parishad chairman M. Balaiah who asked the teacher to bring the children to Sangareddy. Then it was informed to Collector S. Suresh Kumar.

Admitted to schools

Suresh Kumar got them admitted in residential hostels so that they can continue their education and issued orders in this regard.

Mr. Balaiah advanced Rs. 5,000 to them. When the question of taking care of them during the summer holidays arose, it was Narasimhulu who came forward. “I lost my father in my childhood. I did not even remember him. My mother brought me up while working in the fields and I assisted her,” Narasimhulu told The Hindu.

Reference Link
http://www.hindu.com/2010/04/28/stories/2010042851750200.htm

Courtesy
The Hindu

What is the true price of Rwanda's recovery?

Posted in Economy by goodnessapple on March 31, 2010

In the middle of Lake Kivu, on Rwanda’s western border, is a shining example of how Rwanda is changing – a pioneering methane extraction plant providing much-needed power for the fast-growing economy.

Killer’s admission of 700 murders illustrates the scale of divisions to overcome

The plant – entirely developed and funded by the Rwandan government – is testimony to the country’s remarkable recovery from the horrors of the 1994 genocide.

Since the genocide, in which some 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed, Rwanda’s efficient, imaginative and relatively incorrupt government has acquired many admirers in the West.

They are impressed by its efforts to play down differences between Hutu and Tutsi, to encourage outside investors and to plough money into development, with the ambitious aim of building the silicon valley of Central Africa.

Some, however, say the economic growth has come at a high cost in terms of human rights.

Western backing

A powerful network of US corporate bosses have acted as cheerleaders for Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame:

“Rwanda has gone from literally the bottom of the heap to become the beacon for Africa in 15 years,” says Joe Ritchie, a Chicago financier, now one of Mr Kagame’s senior advisers.

Equally impressed is the British government, Rwanda’s biggest bilateral donor, which gives the country about £50m ($75m) a year in aid, most of which goes straight into central government coffers.

Victoire Ingabire
The genocide has become a kind of blackmail to be used against everyone. After 16 years it is high time for democracy
Opposition politician Victoire Ingabire

“There is a dynamism and a focus in the Rwandan leadership,” says British High Commissioner Nick Cannon. “I think that comes from the emergence of the current government from the experience of the genocide.”

But a growing band of critics disagrees.

“There’s practically no freedom of expression, the political space for any kind of opposition is extremely limited, and anyone who tries to criticise or challenge the government is subject to intimidation or threats or worse,” says Carina Tertsakian from Human Rights Watch.

“We have a situation where British money is serving to prop up a government that is routinely violating the rights of its citizens. I simply don’t think that the genocide and the events that surrounded it can be used as an excuse to suppress criticism and dissent.”

Anti-ideology law

Rwanda’s Tutsi-dominated government, the force that ended the genocide in 1994, fiercely rejects such claims.

“I think there is this myth or created idea that Rwanda is doing well but you can’t express yourself,” says Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo. “It’s totally wrong.”

Ms Tertsakian and other rights critics cite a law that bans the spreading of “genocide ideology”.

Visiting a state-run education camp for young Rwandans

Aimed in theory at preventing the kind of racial hate-speak that fuelled the genocide, they say it is used in practice to suppress any criticism the government dislikes.

Rwanda’s most prominent human rights groups, Liprodhor, says that the law has restricted its activities and sent half of its staff into exile:

“Everyone feared being persecuted, they could be imprisoned,” activist Gertrude Nyampinga says.

The genocide ideology charge has also been used against one of the most controversial figures in Rwanda today, opposition politician Victoire Ingabire.

Recently returned after years in exile, she hopes to stand against Mr Kagame in August’s elections, but she has not yet been allowed to register her party and has no access to the state-run media.

The government accuses her of inflammatory language, and the police have called her in several times for questioning – most recently last week.

Solidarity message

Ms Ingabire says the country is effectively a one-party state where a climate of fear prevents Hutus and Tutsis discussing their differences.

“The genocide has become a kind of blackmail to be used against everyone. After 16 years it is high time for democracy – not to continue to brandish the genocide to avoid a democratic process,” Ms Ingabire said.

I would not mind being forced to live peacefully with my neighbour, because the alternative is to be free to kill my neighbour
Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo

A cornerstone of the government’s policy of reconciliation is the system of education camps, or ingando, where students and other young people attend courses in military training and Rwandan history.

The message there is that Hutu and Tutsi are artificial categories exaggerated by Rwanda’s former colonial masters, which should now be forgotten.

“We’re no longer Hutus or Tutsis, we are Rwandan, we are one. The elder are already destroyed… But from us we have hope for the future, for a better Rwanda,” business student Jacques Rubayiza told us when we visited one camp.

Everyone we spoke to at the camp expressed the same zeal and the same point of view – without dissent.

But even prominent Tutsi exiles, such as Joseph Sebarenzi, believe that artificially suppressing differences rather than airing them could result in violence erupting again one day.

UK aid role

Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo dismisses such notions saying: “I would not mind being forced to live peacefully with my neighbour, because the alternative is to be free to kill my neighbour.”

As for Britain’s role in supporting Rwanda, Mr Cannon says: “Although there are aspects of the country’s human rights that are not perfect – certainly we wouldn’t be here or doing what we’re doing if we didn’t think there was a commitment on the part of the government to the values we share.”

He points in particular to a shared commitment to pro-poor policies – thanks in part to British aid, the proportion of poor Rwandans fell from 70% of the population to 57% between 1994 and 2006.

School attendance has risen dramatically, maternal mortality has fallen.

“Where our money goes,” he says, “is into improving the daily lives of the people of this country. There’s no real scope for the diversion of that money into other purposes.”

Reference Link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/8593734.stm

Courtesy
BBC News

Aid for student(Guinness Record holder)

Posted in Heroes by goodnessapple on March 13, 2010

CHENNAI, India: S. Lakshmi, a student of MBA at Anna University recently received aid of Rs.44,000 from Commissioner of Police T. Rajendran.

According to a release, Ms.Lakshmi, daughter of Selvaraj, a hotel employe, holds a Guinness Record for writing for 30 hours non-stop. After she approached the Commissioner for financial support to pursue her higher education, Mohan Kaul and Magesh Ramachandran, chairman and managing director of Common Wealth Finance respectively, came forward to help her, on the Commissioner’s recommendation.

Reference Link
http://www.hindu.com/2010/03/13/stories/2010031365290300.htm

Courtesy
The Hindu