Saturday, March 5, 2022

751/2021-22 04-03-2022 Chennai WEEKLY EXPRESS TRAIN BETWEEN NAGAPATTINAM AND VASCO DA GAMA

 


751/2021-22 04-03-2022

Chennai

WEEKLY EXPRESS TRAIN BETWEEN NAGAPATTINAM AND VASCO DA GAMA

South Western Railway has notified the running of a Weekly Train, No.17315/17316, between Vasco Da Gama and Nagapattinam as detailed below:-

Train No. 17315 Vasco Da Gama – Nagapattinam Weekly Express will leave Vasco Da Gama at 09.00 hrs o­n Mondays and reach Nagapattinam at 11.40 hrs o­n Tuesdays, starting from 7th March 2022.

In the return direction, Train No. 17316 Nagapattinam – Vasco Da Gama Weekly Express will leave Nagapattinam at 00.20 hrs o­n Wednesdays and reach Vasco Da Gama at 03.25 hrs o­n Thursdays, starting from 9th March 2022.

Both the above train services, Train Nos. 17315 / 17316 Vasco Da Gama – Nagapattinam – Vasco Da Gama presently operated up to Nagapattinam, will be extended to Velankanni. The date of extension upto Velankanni will be notified later.

Coach Composition: One AC Two Tier Coach, Four AC Three Tier Coaches, Seven Sleeper Class Coaches, Four General Second Class Coaches & Two Luggage cum brake Vans

The details of timings and stoppages of Train No. No.17315 / 17316 Vasco Da Gama – Velankanni – Vasco Da Gama Weekly Express trains are as follows: (Timings in hours)


17315 Vasco Da Gama – Nagapattinam Weekly Express

Station

Train No. 17316 Nagapattinam – Vaso Da Gama Weekly Express

09.00 (Dep)

(d)

Vasco Da Gama

(a)

     03.25 (Arr)

09.30 /09.35

(a/d)

Madgaon

(a/d)

02.15 / 02.20

09.49 /09.50

(a/d)

Sanverdam Church

(a/d)

01.20 /01.21

10.15 / 10.20

(a/d)

Kulem

(a/d)

00.55 /01.00

11.30 / 11.35

(a/d)

Castle Rock

(a/d)

22.50 /22.55

12.10 / 12.12

(a/d)

Londa

(a/d)

22.13 /22.15

13.38 /13.40

(a/d)

Dharwar

(a/d)

20.34 / 20.36

14.20 / 14.30

(a/d)

Hubballi

(a/d)

20.00 /20.10

15.58 /16.00

(a/d)

Haveri

(a/d)

17.53 /17.55

16.29 /16.30

(a/d)

Ranibennur

(a/d)

17.20 /17.22

17.03 /17.05

(a/d)

Davangere

(a/d)

16.43/16.45

18.30 /18.32

(a/d)

Birur

(a/d)

15.20 /15.22

19.20 /19.25

(a/d)

Arsikere

(a/d)

14.35 /14.40

19.46 / 19.48

(a/d)

Tiptur

(a/d)

14.13 / 14.15

20.50 / 20.52

(a/d)

Tumakuru

(a/d)

13.18 /13.20

21.35 /21.37

(a/d)

Chik Banavar

(a/d)

12.30 / 12.32

23.11 / 23.12

(a/d)

Banaswadi

(a/d)

11.57 /11.58

23.51/ 23.53

(a/d)

Krishnarajapuram

(a/d)

11.30 / 11.32

00.38 / 00.40

(a/d)

Bangarapet

(a/d)

10.33 /10.35

04.02 / 04.05

(a/d)

Salem Jn

(a/d)

07.22 / 07.25

05.20 /05.30

(a/d)

Erode Jn

(a/d)

06.25 / 06.35

06.28 /06.30

(a/d)

Karur

(a/d)

04.23 / 04.25

08.10 / 08.20

(a/d)

Tiruchchirappalli Jn

(a/d)

03.00 / 03.10

09.28 /09.30

(a/d)

Thanjavur

(a/d)

01.48 / 01.50

10.23 /10.25

(a/d)

Thiruvarur Jn

(a/d)

00.53 / 00.55

11.40 (Arr)

(a)

Nagapattinam

(d)

       00.20 (Dep)


Advance Reservation for the above Express trains are open from Southern Railway end


                       

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Is refusal of mental illness therapy ground for divorce?

Is refusal of mental illness therapy ground for divorce?

TNN | Mar 5, 2022, 04.28 AM IST

NEW DELHI: Can wife’s non-acknowledgement of her schizophrenia and alleged refusal to get psychiatric treatment be termed cruelty and entitle husband to get divorce under an over 150-year-old law governing dissolution of Christian marriages?

A Supreme Court bench of Justices Vineet Saran and Aniruddha Bose agreed to examine this question posed by advocate Vipin Nair on behalf of a woman, whose marriage to a man was annulled by the Kerala high court despite it granting custody of the couple’s two daughters and agreeing with the trial court that she did not suffer from unsound mind.

The couple married in 2001 as per Christian rites and had two daughters in 2002 and 2009. The husband filed for divorce under Indian Divorce Act, 1869, in the year 2012. A family court said the woman left the matrimonial home in February 2011, hence no case was made out for grant of divorce on the ground of desertion. It also rejected divorce on the ground of unsoundness of mind of the wife, finding nothing wrong with the wife’s mental condition. The HC agreed with these two findings of the family court.

However, it agreed with the family court’s finding that the husband was entitled to divorce on the ground of cruelty as she suffered from paranoid schizophrenia.

The HC noted the SC rulings that divorce cannot be granted merely for the reason of suffering of Schizophrenia. But, it differentiated the case in hand and said, “this court (the HC) cannot ignore the fact that the woman refused to acknowledge having illness. She was also not prepared to undergo treatment and come out of such illness, even though she is mentally sound.”

“She can very well identify her problem. In fact, the doctor diagnosed her problem. But still she refused to acknowledge and undergo treatment. In such circumstances, the husband cannot be forced to live with a spouse who refused to undergo treatment,” the HC said.

Nair argued before Justice Saran-led bench that said that if the so-called refusal of wife to undergo psychiatric treatment, even when it was found that she did not suffer from unsoundness of mind, becomes a valid ground for dissolution of marriage, this could become a ruse for the husbands refusing to take care of their wives to seek divorce. The bench issued notice to the husband and sought his response in six weeks.

Fake marksheet, note racket busted


Fake marksheet, note racket busted

TNN | Mar 5, 2022, 04.11 AM IST

Surat: Acting on tip-off, a team from Bharuch’s special operation group (SOG) busted a racket of making bogus marksheets as well as counterfeit notes by two people, who were carrying out this illegal business, under the garb of a job placement agency.

SOG got tip-off that two people named Sachin Kharva (30), a resident of Ramnagar in Hansot village and Rahulkumar Parmar (31), resident of Hariom Nagar in Andada village, were operating the racket under the name of Arti Consultancy” in Omkar-2 complex in Ankleshwar.

Police raided the place and seized 215 duplicate marksheets, 126 original marksheets, 19,796 hologram stickers, four fake notes of Rs 50, 24 notes of Rs 100, a computer and printer worth Rs 40,000, two mobile phones worth Rs 10,000.

The duo had been running the racket for the last two years.

They were making fake marksheets of different institutes and universities including Gujarat education board, Industrial Training Institutes (ITI) and Veer Narmad South Gujarat University (VNSGU).

Police registered an offence under relevant sections of IPC.

Ukraine crisis: NMC allows foreign medical graduates to complete internship in India

Ukraine crisis: NMC allows foreign medical graduates to complete internship in India

Amid ongoing Ukraine crisis, NMC has considered foreign medical graduates (FMG) with incomplete internships as eligible to complete the remaining part of their internship in India Ukraine’s state-run universities providing medical education at low costs have been attracting Indian students for years. The NMC issued detailed guidelines, which are required to be followed by state medical councils for grant of registration of foreign medical graduates till further instructions from the commission or implementation of National Exit Test, whichever occurs earlier 

Published on Mar 05, 2022 01:51 AM IST


Amid the ongoing evacuation of medical students from war-torn Ukraine, the National Medical Commission (NMC) has considered the foreign medical graduates (FMG) with incomplete internships due to compelling situations, like war, as eligible to complete the remaining part of their internship in India.

For securing registration to practice medicine in India, the students pursuing medical studies abroad require to do double internships — once in the country where they got the MBBS and again in India — as per the National Medical Commission (Foreign Medical Graduate Licentiate) Regulations, 2021.

Ukraine’s state-run universities providing medical education at low costs have been attracting Indian students for years. According to the country’s ministry of education and science, there are around 18,095 Indian students in Ukraine. There were hundreds of students, who were doing their internship in the final year of their course.

The NMC undergraduate medical education board in a notification stated that it has been observed that there are also some foreign medical graduates with incomplete internship due to such compelling situation which is beyond their control, such as pandemic Covid-19 and war etc. “Considering the agony and stress faced by these foreign medical graduates, their application to complete the remaining part of an internship in India is considered eligible. Accordingly, the same may be processed by state medical councils provided that the candidates must have cleared FMGE before applying for completion of internship in India,” said deputy secretary Shambhu Sharan Kumar.

The NMC issued the detailed guidelines, which are required to be followed by the state medical councils for the grant of registration of FMGs till further instructions from the commission or implementation of the National Exit Test (NExT), whichever occurs earlier.

“The state medical councils should ensure the Foreign Medical Graduate Examination (FMGE) conducted by the National Board of Examination (NBE) should be cleared by the candidates seeking registration in India. If the candidate is found fulfilling criteria, provisional registration may be granted by the state medical councils for 12 months internship or balance period, as the case may be. State medical councils should obtain an undertaking from the medical college that no fee is charged by the medical college from the FMGs for permitting them to do their internship. The stipend and other facilities to FMGs should be extended equivalent Indian medical graduates being trained at the government medical colleges as fixed by the appropriate authority,” it reads.

TN STUDENTS IN UKRAINE


 

77% medical seats under NRI quota go abegging


77% medical seats under NRI quota go abegging

TNN | Mar 5, 2022, 03.49 AM IST


Chennai: Nearly 77% of the undergraduate medical seats under the NRI quota have remained vacant after the first round of online medical counselling for 2021 admissions. The state selection committee, which has extended counselling for the category, has announced that if these seats continue to remain vacant until Monday, they will be considered as “lapsed seats” and moved to the general pool.

When the counselling opened, 17 self-financing colleges asked for 15% of the seats to be set aside for NRI admissions, for which the fee committee has permitted college managements to charge ₹23.50 lakh as an annual fee. “But even when we opened the counselling there were just 250 applications for the 398 seats. When the process began, 106 candidates locked choices and 92 took the seats,” said selection committee secretary Dr P Vasanthamani.

The committee then decided to extend the first round of counselling for the category and the deadline for registration ended by noon on Friday. Candidates have been asked to lock choices by 10pm on Saturday. “We will be putting out the results by Saturday and students will be given time to join colleges until Monday,” she said.

Seats that continue to remain vacant after Monday will be considered ‘lapsed NRI seats’ and added back into the management quota matrix. Students from the general category in the management rank list can apply for the seats. The fee for lapsed seats will be ₹20.3 lakh. The fee committee has allowed colleges to charge to take ₹12.5 lakh for students allotted under management quota and ₹3.8 to ₹4 lakh for students allotted under government quota.

Students say they will be happy to have at least 300 more seats on the seat matrix. “These seats will cost us more than management quota seats, but it is still lesser than deemed universities, which is the only other option we are left with,” he said.

The admissions to deemed universities, which charge around ₹25lakh a year, are done by the medical counselling committee of the Directorate General of Health Services.

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