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This year, the National Green Tribunal (NGT) had asked Delhi University to conduct paperless elections. Bolstered by NGT’s order, University authorities have decided to allow each candidate to paste only two “handwritten” posters in the campus. The chief election officer Prof. D.S Rawat said “As per the NGT order, we will allow just two ‘handwritten’ posters per candidate in one campus. Candidates will have to strictly abide by the model code of conduct set according to the Lyngdoh Committee’s recommendations”.  In a recent meeting of the central advisory committee, decisions were taken to prevent wastage of polls of paper used by candidates for campaigning. Every year, lakhs of rupees are wasted on papers used in campaigns. But the university has not yet taken any action in this regard.

Recently, one of the candidates was found to have violated the rule in colleges across north campus. Following the trend, just after a couple of days, many other parties also showered the corridors of colleges with their flyers. No action has been taken against any of the candidates even though college level committees have been constituted under the principals to report such violations to the University authorities. Last Thursday, one candidate and his supporters were found defacing the Vishwavidyalaya Marg in front of gate no.1 of North Campus with paper posters and fliers. When asked about the same, one of the supporters said “These pamphlets are printed to be thrown on campus”.

Even though the campaigning has started with full swing, the University authorities seem to be in deep sleep. Without any actions, even after rampant violations, it looks like the University is planning to implement paperless elections by making rules which exist only on paper.

Image Credits: www.thehindu.com
Srivedant Kar
[email protected]

The 2nd edition of TEDxFMS was held on 3rd September, 2016 at the Conference Centre of Delhi University. This time, the theme of the independently organized event was ‘Driving Change’. The event saw the participation of a large number of attendees, a majority of which were students of the Faculty of Management Studies and various other colleges of Delhi University. The event featured talks from various stalwarts of industries, NGOs, artists and highly accomplished achievers. The event started with a talk by Pramod Bhasin, the non-executive Vice Chairman of Genpact-the largest Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) Company of India. He talked about the birth of an industry which is a story of naivety, foolishness and sheer hope. Talking about the birth of BPO industry in Gurgaon, he asked students to be as informal as they can be in their work life, as informality drives communication. He said “One thing that I have learnt from the Americans is that- don’t fear failure. There is only one life to lead. If the idea blows up, so do we.” This talk was followed by Anuksha Arsh Gulati, the founder of A.A.G- Arise Awake Grow. She talked about the importance of spirituality and highlighted it through various life events. Talking about personal spiritual growth, she said “Spirituality and Science are the two sides of the same coin.” [caption id="attachment_44253" align="aligncenter" width="488"]Anuksha Arsh Gulati Anuksha Arsh Gulati[/caption] The next talk was delivered by Biswapati Sarkar, the creative director of The Viral Fever (TVF). He spoke on how to engineer a career in the entertainment industry. Speaking about the obsession of Indian parents with engineering, he said “In India, if you are good at something, you do it after Engineering.” Talking about the sad state of the Entertainment Industry in India, he said that four young people driving around the India Gate in an open jeep, is a fifty year old idea of what a twenty year old does. After this, the stage was taken over by Khurafati Nitin who spoke on how to adapt to changes during the ups and downs in life through examples from his own life. He explained that struggles are the reasons for our rise in life. He ended his talk saying “Life is a waste of time. Time is a waste of life. So why not waste all your time to have the time of your life?”  [caption id="attachment_44244" align="aligncenter" width="310"]IMG_20160904_150942 Khurafati Nitin[/caption] The event resumed after half an hour with a talk by Shivya Nath, the award winning travel blogger. She spoke about her experiences of leaving her job at 23 and going after her dream of travelling the world. She said “Have a simple life, yet that is inspiring each day.” This was followed by a talk from Marc Saxor, a German analyst, publicist and strategist who spoke on how to have an alternate vision and go forward in implementing it. [caption id="attachment_44252" align="aligncenter" width="285"]Marc Saxer Marc Saxer[/caption] The next talk was given by Venkat Raman Singh Shyam, a contemporary Gond artist who has been awarded with Rajya Hasta Shilpa Puraskar by Govt. of Madhya Pradesh. He did a jugalbandi with Anand, who is his friend, a writer and publisher of several books. Speaking about the importance of tribal arts, Anand said “Adivasis are not only our first people, but also our first artists. The art we make and the land we live in, own us.” Speaking about his art, Venkat said “My journey has been that of a pinwheel, of constant change. I am a Gond, and I paint Gond art. Or else I would’ve been rootless.” [caption id="attachment_44246" align="aligncenter" width="479"]PicsArt_09-04-03.17.16 Venkat Raman Singh Shyam[/caption] The last talk of the evening was given by Jasper Reid, the founder of IMM which builds consumer brands in international markets like the Wendy’s and Jamie Oliver restaurants in India. He spoke of how to better yourself at changes in life. He said, “In addition to focusing on your mental health and your academics, an important area to focus on is your ability to adapt, on your inner Arctic Fox.” [caption id="attachment_44247" align="aligncenter" width="509"]PicsArt_09-04-03.05.26 Jasper Reid[/caption] The event ended with a vote of thanks from Dr. Monica Singhania, Professor at Faculty of Management Studies (FMS). Overall, the event witnessed an audience which happily posted about the event online with #TEDxFMS. Image Credits: Gerush Bahal for DU Beat Srivedant Kar [email protected] Swareena Gurung [email protected]]]>

Our history and heritage, as we all know, shapes the kind of moulds we put our personalities into. There are legends and there are facts and then there are those stories that families keep under lock and key, hidden behind the boulders of the past. Our acceptance of the Transgender depends on a series of reactions that history has recorded. It would be incredibly hard to look at the world now and believe that the earliest records do show that transgender humans were greeted with great veneration as they were seen to be able to serve and understand a very complex mindset of both men and women, a different kind of ambidexterity.

However, what we find in records is often the surface of a much more intrinsic core and so is the case with transgender people. It is not knowledge that an outsider possesses but with an inclination to tap into the sentiments of this population, it gets easier to understand the struggles they go through.

The definition and interpretations of the transgender has gone through quite a few revisions over the years. In basic terms, it is a person who has been born with the physical orientation of a certain gender but the person’s mentality and if I may say so, soul alignment inclines towards another gender. Can someone, anyone ever stop to imagine the plight that they have to go through their entire lives? Getting through life, boosting yourself everyday to get people to like you is hard enough but leading a life in which people rarely understand you is a whole different level of a triumph.

The ‘hijras’ in India are popularly known to comprise this population and are considered to be a sign of blessing at weddings and festive gatherings but the acceptance here comes out of an attempt dipped in superstition due to the fear of bad karma and dharma.

As civilizations have moved on from the matrilineal societies to staunch patriarchal societies, we only now can feel the tiniest bit of a movement and at the moment, that’s all it is. Learned Indians are not ready to accept humans just like you and me because they have not been blessed with the same sexual and mental orientation that their body should coincide with. We often describe their minds to be too complex for our liking but we can’t really blame them because they’ve constantly been gushed with judgmental atrocities.

When we don’t quite understand a situation, the vital thing to do is to think rationally for a second, put yourself in their situation (repeated because we don’t quite seem to get it). Things we can’t seem to fathom are not problematic and definitely do not invite antagonism but gentle acceptance of a difference. Celebrate the courage that some people have to be able to make a public realization of how they actually should belong and go ahead and make that change.

Image Credits- cake.youthkiawaaz.com/2016/01/31/best-of-tumblr-gender-nonconformity-art

Baani Kashyap
[email protected]

HANS RAJ COLLEGE Walking into college feels like walking into a factory site. Students are welcomed by behemoth construction taking place beside the canteen and near the main block. Initially, the former appeared to be nothing more than an eyesore. Soon however, it turned into a life threat, as debris from the site began plummeting down on students who dared to venture into the canteen area. Imagine feeling like Chicken Little in every single moment you spend at college! It is rather depressing to know that the most beloved and popular space in college – The Lover’s Point – is now also the most lethal and comes with a muted ‘enter at your own peril’ warning. The construction taking place near the main block is problematic because of the sounds emanating from the drilling, breaking, and building activity. The cacophony disrupts teaching and sometimes, splinters and tiny rocks fly into the classroom itself, injuring nonchalant students.

DAULAT RAM COLLEGE

Daulat Ram College has recently made headlines for its inadequate infrastructure, to the point of social media being flooded with memes about students wearing helmets to class. On 30 August 2016, a chunk of cement and plaster fell from the ceiling during a lecture in Room 105, injuring five students. Students had protested a mere couple weeks prior to this event, demanding timely renovation and proper sanitation in the college. In the aftermath of this event however, both students and teachers have taken a more hardline stance and boycotted classes until their demands for safe classrooms are met. The teachers’ association of the college has drafted a resolution stating the same. Police and media infiltrated the college on the day of the event, and emergency meetings were called between the Principal and the governing body. The students went as far as to involve the Vice-Chancellor of DU in the proceedings. An interactive session between administrative authorities, students, teachers, and parents has also been scheduled. We have yet to see whether this will be enough to finally propel the authorities to action. At the end of the day, all students have the same complaint: if only the college had been wiser and undertaken all construction work during the long summer break, students would have not just reaped the benefits of improved infrastructure, but also dodged (pun intended) the menacing consequences of infrastructural development. Kriti Sharma [email protected] Vineeta Rana [email protected]

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The burkini is just another swimsuit, the burqa is just another form of apparel, the headscarf is just another head gear and the hijab is just a choice!

The French slogan of ‘Liberty, Equality and Fraternity’ has lost its meaning in the very country of its birth. In a move that grossly criminalises clothing, many French cities have banned the burkini. This communally – tinged move targeted against the Muslim population who usually favour a modest version of the swimsuit commonly called the ‘burkini,’ has garnered immense backlash and criticism on social media from the rest of the world. France’s predominant argument is that the burkini violates France’s century-old commitment to promote secularism in public life.

The Ban on the Burkini, quite evidently, is a part of the Islamophobia developing in the West. It has been justified by some groups by calling the ‘Hijab’, or the burkini in this case, patriarchal and oppressive.

This issue needs to be addressed from various angles. A large section opposing the view has claimed that the ban had been initiated solely as a part of the anti-Islamic or Islamophobic attitude of the French Government. Earlier, France had faced severe criticism regarding the ban on the use of the headscarf. Others opine that using the garb of feminism to justify the curtailment of the rights of Muslim women to dress as they please is ridiculous and instrumental.
Still others have supported the opposition meted against the ban. However, these groups claim that while one supports the rights of muslim women to wear the clothes of their choice, the question of choice must also be dealt with in cases where some muslim countries do not provide this choice to women at all. Crucial to this debate then, are the voices of the muslim women itself.

Hijab, which literally means, ‘to conceal’ or ‘to cover’, has been perceived by many as regressively patriarchal and oppressive thereof. It has been claimed by those who oppose it that the hijab is forced upon muslim women by the men in their lives. However, a stereotyping of a muslim women’s choice of clothes cannot be a part of the healthy criticism under feminism. A closer understanding is required in an attempt to bring forth the marginalised view of the muslim women themselves.

A large section of hijab – donning women claim that they have ‘chosen’ to wear it. It is an independent choice which is based on their belief in the religion they have chosen to follow. It is also claimed in support of hijab that a view of feminism which adheres to the idea of liberating women’s bodies by dictating them what to wear is not inclusive. It is, in fact, another way of telling women what to do in ways very similar to how patriarchy dictated women. According to an essayist Hiba Ahmad,” I want people to know that when I dress up the muslim way, it is because I am fighting a systematic oppression of women in which women’s bodies are sexualised and objectified”. For these women, the hijab should be seen as a part of many ways in which feminism is trying to empower and liberate women. A large number of intellectuals, entrepreneurs, and athletes are muslim women who choose to wear the hijab. It is true that many hijab wearing women have been left out, but the example of Egyptian and Iranian athletes like Ibtihaj Muhammad, who won the USA a bronze medal, and Kimia Alizadeh from Iran goes on to show the scope of participation and empowerment largely ignored.

The ignorance of the availability of these platforms for muslim women or a denial of it by men, and not their religion is to be addressed. It is not unknown that the authority of interpreting religious scripts has been largely given to men because of patriarchy. A lack of participation of muslim women in productive opportunities should then be seen in this context. Many muslim women have been kept away from the scope of egalitarianism and gender equality in their religion through patriarchy.

Criminalising any form of clothing, whether considered promiscuous or modest, is wrong.  It entails that the state is infringing upon the personal choices of its population. The interests of leaders should not be achieved at the cost of personal freedom. Instead, they should reflect the voices of the public while not marginalising the numerically weaker sections. Secular France shouldn’t call for the transparence of religions, but rather the acceptance of religious diversity. Burkini or bikini, to free the nipple or to conceal it- it is for a woman to choose. However, women have to make aware choices because patriarchy is not a great choice after all.

 

Tooba Towfiq
[email protected]
Swareena Gurung
[email protected]

Kat Kalrav is an annual feature celebrated on 15th August expressing and celebrating Freedom of the Didis of GB Road. An initiative launched by Kat Katha has been working with the Didis and Children of GB Road for over four years for a better life and to pursue their dreams. A Carnival is held every year where we have the Didis and Children come out of their homes and celebrate their freedom with main stream people free of their taboo and marginalisation.

Kat Kalrav 2016 was a little different from the previous years as we felt that there are many more didis who remain locked up in their homes and to reach each and every one of them, it was important that we meet them in their dwellings, pray in their midst and share the joy of chatting with them.

Kat Katha with over 100 volunteers distributed ourselves into groups of three or four and walked into the homes of each and every Didi, sat with them in a circle, and began the chat session with a Sarv Dharm prayer holding hands with a view to fill each and every room with positivity and hope. At the end of the prayer, we chatted with the Didis and while moving out handed them a small packet each contributed by one of our Volunteers containing meetha paan, meethi supari and mouth freshener. In a way helping them to get out of the habit of chewing tobacco, which is harmful.

The “Pyaar ka Mohalla” feeling that we always follow in our daily exchanges with the Didis and Children was greatly reinforced as we held discussions in their own homes

Once the prayer was over, we all collected on the road facing the homes of the Didis, held our hands and formed a human chain along the length of the road and loudly chanted Om, the universal prayer.

Later, all the volunteers assembled in the school and everyone shared their unique experiences.

This Independence Day, a group of compassionate youngsters got together to simply pray for freedom for those who didn’t understand the very word. It was truly something extraordinary.

 

Guest post by Kat Katha

 

Janki Devi Memorial College recently held elections for the Students’ Union, academic year 2016-2017. The Union has four posts – President, Vice President, General Secretary and Treasurer. The election week saw some very enthusiastic campaigns.

As in a democracy, the election process for the Students’ Union comprises of a series of steps. Nominations are filed, core teams for each candidate are formed, agendas released, campaigns carried out and secret ballots cast. This time, it was quite different in the case of Janki Devi Memorial College.

JDMC for the first time conducted its elections through e-voting on August 10th,2016. What used to take an entire day was over in a couple of hours and the results were declared on the spot. Plus, it was a paper free election. What could be more eco-friendly than this!

The results were as follows: Simran Gupta as the President, Parul Chauhan as the Vice President, Dolly Seth as the General Secretary and Zhiwa Dechan as the Treasurer. Besides the elected union, there is an extended union where candidates face a grilling interview. The formal handing over will be held on August 17th, 2016 where all the elected and extended members will take an oath to fulfill their responsibilities.

Hansraj College will become the first Delhi University college to hoist the national flag in its campus. Is it propagation of a certain idea of nationalism by those in power?

Hans Raj College will become the first college in Delhi University to hoist the national flag in its premises. The decision to hoist the tricolour, the request for which was made by college principal Rama Sharma to college alumnus Naveen Jindal, comes in the wake of the nationalism debate that raged after the JNU controversy in February this year. At an event to mark the 69th founder’s day of the college, the decision was made public by industrialist and founder of the Flag Foundation of India, Naveen Jindal, who shared the stage with the varsity Vice Chancellor Y K Tyagi and other notable alumni like Om Prakash Kohli, the governor of Gujarat.

Jindal filed a writ petition at the Delhi High Court in 1995 contesting the order of the Commissioner of Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh, who invoked the erstwhile Flag Code of India, prohibiting him from flying the tricolour at his factory premises. The court having considered his plea asked the government to constitute a committee which eventually mandated that the citizens, by the virtue of having the fundamental right of expression, have claim over the national flag and can hoist it on days other than Independence Day and Republic Day. The committee, headed by Dr P.D. Shenoy suggested changes to the code which eventually culminated in the formulation of the Flag Code of India (2002) which gave citizens the right to hoist the tricolour on private premises in accordance with a certain protocol on days other than gazetted holidays. The national flag positioned at the centre of Connaught Place was also installed by the tycoon who was influenced by the liberal usage of the American flag during his years at the University of Texas where he was president of the student government.

The decision, which emerged from the Hans Raj principal’s request to have the tricolour by 26th January 2017, can be viewed as the result of an informal meeting among the Vice Chancellors of 42 Central Universities and the then HRD minister, Smriti Irani, in the month of February. The backdrop of this meeting was the JNU imbroglio, allegedly involving anti-national slogans, hurting national sentiments and its highly questionable media coverage. The gathering took the decision to fly the tricolour on college buildings of central universities to instil a feeling of nationalism among the student community and the youth. On similar lines, the residential Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas (JNVs) in the country have been asked to follow suit.

That the premise behind the argumentation of the Human Resource Development Ministry (HRD) is based on inculcating nationalist feeling among the youth is bizarre in its own way. A certain idea of nationalism and not nationalism per se is being attempted to be appropriated through symbolic means by those in power. The symbolic nature of the tricolour which was designed by freedom fighter Pingali Venkayya, was meant to create an open space within every citizen to have the collective conscience of belonging, along with having one’s own individual idea of the nation. The imposition of an idea of the nation, which is being promulgated by the HRD, has already garnered success in the way in which the non- Kashmiri students of the National Institute of Technology (NIT), Srinagar, are demanding the tricolour on the institution’s premises to feel ‘protected from the fringe elements in the valley’ as if the tricolour doesn’t belong to the Kashmiris and is exclusive in nature. This exclusivist approach by the ministry limits the idea of the nation and grants the right of its formulation to just certain individuals in Lutyen’s Delhi.

That the hoisting of the national flag has been a failed experiment to instil the ‘feeling of nationalism’ is evident in the ways in which student eruptions happened in institutions like Jawaharlal Nehru University and Hyderabad Central University, where the national flag was already hoisted.

The hoisting of the tricolour in the current political atmosphere is not to be viewed in isolation since certain ideas are being pushed alongside such symbolic installations at educational institutions. If Hans Raj College successfully hoists the tricolour, a symbol which is being instrumentalised to push forward a specific agenda, then this will engender a phenomenon characterised by demands from other colleges in the varsity for the same. The tricolour stands for the rich cultural legacy and the secular ethos that the country preserved at the time of independence. It also symbolises the freedom struggle that strived for the freedom of thought and expression and celebrated mutual co-existence among the warring factions of the subcontinent. It also stands for secularism and inclusivity. In the current political environment, one needs to understand that the idea of nationalism that is being promulgated by the ruling order isn’t concomitant with the national flag, for the attempts to suppress dissent and free speech have been major components of the undercurrent that has characterised the need to advertise a certain idea of nationalism through the symbol of the tricolour.

 The government needs to learn from the JNU experiment and realise that political contamination of the national flag for the promotion of its version of nationalism will serve to jeopardise the academic ecosystem in varsities across the country, and curb space for dissent and scientific temper. A democracy essentially preaches the idea of pitting an argument against an argument rather than using force to crush dissent. The need of the hour is to offer space for research and create infrastructure rather than adorn the existing ones with political symbolisms.

Image credit: du.ac.in

Aditya Narang ([email protected]) and Sidharth Yadav ([email protected])

 

Donald Trump’s nomination for the President of USA might have trickled a few giggles in 2015 but ever since then he’s got not only the demographic but also the spectators spinning in circles. As of recently, the Republicans are giving Trump the raised eyebrow while he claims to never have been in better shape. Trump was almost successful in waving adios to Hillary until she took a bus of her own and has been in the widest lead yet, as reported by the Daily Mail.

A lot of people today have taken firm stances on the Trump Campaign but for all those who think of themselves as apprentices to Presidential Elections, let’s stretch some Trump opinions and policies.

To start off, Donald Trump has a stern outlook on abortions and is definitely against them. Posing as the father of the nation, Trump can only see eye to eye with abortion when the mother is close to death. Any other reason, for him, makes a person not pro-life. His eccentric ways will never permit him to realise this as an extremely personal decision that solely lies with the mother.

Secondly, Trump trashes the immigration system of the US, claiming it to be dysfunctional. Trump, while sipping on Margaritas, claims that the Mexicans are “bringing drugs, crimes and are rapists” as told to WJLA TV. During the course of his campaign, he has been known to flip more than an Olympics winning gymnast. He first mentioned he had no fundamental issues with Mexicans and then pounced on them with allegations from all directions. Trump’s manifesto is all about his kingdom and he proposes to build high walls and not let any immigrants permeate those boundaries.

Thirdly, the world watches as children in the US are so unhinged by arms that they venture out and use them for themselves. Donald Trump puts his foot down and says that everyone should have guns and fire back at these killers. Right to bear arms stays. He’s all for a fair battle.

He believes to have Shiva’s third eye when it comes to noting terror suspects and his latest feud with the Khan family, parents of Army Captain Humayun Khan who died serving in Iraq, has made people see red. Trump’s generalising habit has caused him to label nations and races with so little to support. As the Khan Family very rightly pointed out that if it were Trump’s reign, they would not have even been allowed inside the U.S, let alone serving the country. “Have you ever been to Arlington Cemetery?” Khan asked Trump. “Go look at the graves of brave patriots who died defending the United States of America. You will see all faiths, genders, and ethnicities. You have sacrificed nothing and no one.” Trump backfired with absurd replies trying to instigate Khan’s mother to say something as an attempt to prove that women have no say if they are Muslims.

Donald Trump has blatantly made innumerous assumptions which have brought even his campaign managers to join hands in front of him. He has conveniently gone from liking Hillary to calling her the Devil, to having a relationship with President Putin to never even knowing him, to loving debt to having no debts to anybody. He’s definitely a man with a talent for the tale. His absurdity has made him viral and will continue to do so.

Image credits: splitsider.com

Baani Kashyap

[email protected]

The Delhi University Women’s Association (DUWA) has an interesting history. The body was founded in 1964 by the then Vice-Chancellor CB Deshmukh, to bring together women from the varsity who would work for social causes. More importantly, they provided assistance to the soldiers who had fought in the Indo-Sino War of 1962 and the Indo-Pakistan war of 1965, in ways of distributing rations, clothing supplies and the like. In present times, the Mind and Body Centre (MBC) initiated by the association in 2013, is garnering attention.

The Centre provides psychological counselling as well as naturopathic and homeopathic consultation, from Monday to Saturday between 10 am to 6 pm. According to DUWA Secretary Dr. Geeta Sahare, the institution receives roughly about 30 consultations daily from DU employees and students. She adds, “Most of our clients require counselling for psychological issues such as low self-esteem, family discords, anxiety, depression, exam-related stress, relationship problems, etc. We receive a large response particularly during the admission season, as aspirants seek guidance in their selection of college and the admission procedure.” Queries through email and telephonic conversations are also entertained by the centre. Those visiting the facility have to pay an annual registration fee of Rs 50, after which they can use the services for free.

Trained professionals provide homeopathic remedies for ailments such as cough and cold, hair loss, eye infections, migraine, etc.  In addition, free yoga classes are also provided by the centre. Those who are interested simply have to leave their contact details with the office and they’ll be notified once the classes begin. According to the DUWA website, their motive is to provide holistic care to the clients by attending to their physical, mental and emotional health needs.

The centre also houses a day-care facility for children of DU staff. Moreover, through the Durgabhai Deshmukh free school, the centre provides free education to lesser privileged children. Students from various DU colleges such as Lady Irwin College volunteer to interact with and help such children. According to Dr. Sahare, “We hope to expand the day-care centre, which is amongst the best in India.”

According to the Daily Mail, the facility received 18 cases within a month of its initiation and almost a thousand women have approached it so far. However, when asked about the MBC, most DU students are unaware of it. Even the few that know of it seem to be doubtful of the way in which they can approach the counselors. According to Shrishti Yadav, a second year student of Miranda House, “I have seen the facility as it is just across the road from my college. However, I didn’t know about the facilities provided by it. Now that I know of them, especially the yoga sessions, I’ll definitely try to attend them and also speak to my friends about it.”
The Mind and Body Centre can be reached at 1800-3000-7303 for telephonic counselling. Queries can also be sent at [email protected]

Featured Image Credits: http://mbc.du.ac.in/uploads/images/mbc.jpg

Swareena Gurung
[email protected]