Tag: children

  • Rajasthan govt sanctions over Rs 860 crore for inclusion of milk in mid-day meals 

    By PTI

    JAIPUR: The Rajasthan government on Tuesday sanctioned Rs 864 crore for the daily inclusion of milk in mid-day meals to school students up to Class 8 across the state.

    At present, sweetened-hot milk is served twice a week in government schools under the ‘Mukhyamantri Bal Gopal Yojana’, launched on November 29, 2022.

    To further boost the nutritional value of the daily mid-day meals, milk will now be provided during the remaining four days as well for all students of classes 1 to 8, an official statement said.

    The scheme, announced by Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot in the 2023-24 state budget, will be started in government schools, madrassas and special training centers to ensure that students opting for mid-day meals are provided milk as well.

    According to the statement, Gehlot has approved a budget provision of Rs 864 crore for the daily inclusion of milk in mid-day meals.

    Based on another announcement in the budget, the government said canals and distributaries in Kota, Bundi and Baran districts will be strengthened.

    The lining of irrigation water canals and structures of the canal system will be strengthened, the statement said, adding a 406-kilometer lining renovation work has been approved by Gehlot.

    A total of Rs 367.17 crore will be spent on 17 such redevelopment works, of which Rs 38.72 crore will be spent in the financial year 2023-24, it said.

    JAIPUR: The Rajasthan government on Tuesday sanctioned Rs 864 crore for the daily inclusion of milk in mid-day meals to school students up to Class 8 across the state.

    At present, sweetened-hot milk is served twice a week in government schools under the ‘Mukhyamantri Bal Gopal Yojana’, launched on November 29, 2022.

    To further boost the nutritional value of the daily mid-day meals, milk will now be provided during the remaining four days as well for all students of classes 1 to 8, an official statement said.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    The scheme, announced by Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot in the 2023-24 state budget, will be started in government schools, madrassas and special training centers to ensure that students opting for mid-day meals are provided milk as well.

    According to the statement, Gehlot has approved a budget provision of Rs 864 crore for the daily inclusion of milk in mid-day meals.

    Based on another announcement in the budget, the government said canals and distributaries in Kota, Bundi and Baran districts will be strengthened.

    The lining of irrigation water canals and structures of the canal system will be strengthened, the statement said, adding a 406-kilometer lining renovation work has been approved by Gehlot.

    A total of Rs 367.17 crore will be spent on 17 such redevelopment works, of which Rs 38.72 crore will be spent in the financial year 2023-24, it said.

  • 10 children fall ill after consuming food at wedding function in UP’s Badaun

    By PTI

    BAUDAUN: Ten children were hospitalised following complaints of vomiting and stomach ache after consuming food at a wedding function here, a health department official said on Monday.

    The suspected case of food poisoning took place in Ushait area on Sunday, Chief Medical Officer Pradeep Varshney said.

    The children have been admitted to a district hospital, he said, adding that they are now out of danger.

    The health and food departments of the district administration have collected samples of the food that was served at the function, Varshney said.

    A probe has been launched into the matter, he said.

    BAUDAUN: Ten children were hospitalised following complaints of vomiting and stomach ache after consuming food at a wedding function here, a health department official said on Monday.

    The suspected case of food poisoning took place in Ushait area on Sunday, Chief Medical Officer Pradeep Varshney said.

    The children have been admitted to a district hospital, he said, adding that they are now out of danger.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    The health and food departments of the district administration have collected samples of the food that was served at the function, Varshney said.

    A probe has been launched into the matter, he said.

  • Kolkata: Adenovirus claims lives of 10 children in 48 hours

    Express News Service

    KOLKATA: Ten children–newborn to three years old–with symptoms of adenovirus infection died in the past 48 hours at hospitals in Kolkata and Bankura.

    With this, the number of deaths due to the virus-borne disease in Bengal has gone up to 45 in the past two months.

    Following this, the state health department has issued advisories ensuring the presence of pediatricians in government hospitals round-the-clock. A helpline number has been announced. People can call the round-the-clock helpline number 1800-313444222 for admission-related and other inquiries.      

    On Wednesday, four children died in Kolkata’s two hospitals and two others in Bankura Medical College and Hospital.

    Flooded with children coming from districts, the state health department said in an advisory that no child with a respiratory ailment can be referred to a hospital in Kolkata without ensuring that a bed is booked at the destination healthcare facility. The referral, if needed, must be done with the knowledge of the superintendent of the hospital, the advisory mentioned.

    The state government asked all medical colleges, district hospitals, sub-divisional hospitals and state general hospitals across Bengal to run separate clinics for children with an acute respiratory infection (ARI) in the paediatric outpatient department. The special clinics will be meant for those with respiratory illnesses so they do not have to wait in the OPD queue with other patients.    

    A doctor at a hospital said the current spate of viral attacks was causing immune dysregulation which disrupts the normal immune system and makes children vulnerable to reinfection.

    “The inflammatory process that is being triggered inside the body to kill live viruses is creating some problems which we call dysregulated immunity. The initiation of the inflammatory process is helping the child recover from the initial infection but leads to some other problems. We have noticed that some children are falling sick again after being discharged from the hospital. We have asked experts to examine the reason behind it,’’ said an official of the health department.  

    KOLKATA: Ten children–newborn to three years old–with symptoms of adenovirus infection died in the past 48 hours at hospitals in Kolkata and Bankura.

    With this, the number of deaths due to the virus-borne disease in Bengal has gone up to 45 in the past two months.

    Following this, the state health department has issued advisories ensuring the presence of pediatricians in government hospitals round-the-clock. A helpline number has been announced. People can call the round-the-clock helpline number 1800-313444222 for admission-related and other inquiries.      googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    On Wednesday, four children died in Kolkata’s two hospitals and two others in Bankura Medical College and Hospital.

    Flooded with children coming from districts, the state health department said in an advisory that no child with a respiratory ailment can be referred to a hospital in Kolkata without ensuring that a bed is booked at the destination healthcare facility. The referral, if needed, must be done with the knowledge of the superintendent of the hospital, the advisory mentioned.

    The state government asked all medical colleges, district hospitals, sub-divisional hospitals and state general hospitals across Bengal to run separate clinics for children with an acute respiratory infection (ARI) in the paediatric outpatient department. The special clinics will be meant for those with respiratory illnesses so they do not have to wait in the OPD queue with other patients.    

    A doctor at a hospital said the current spate of viral attacks was causing immune dysregulation which disrupts the normal immune system and makes children vulnerable to reinfection.

    “The inflammatory process that is being triggered inside the body to kill live viruses is creating some problems which we call dysregulated immunity. The initiation of the inflammatory process is helping the child recover from the initial infection but leads to some other problems. We have noticed that some children are falling sick again after being discharged from the hospital. We have asked experts to examine the reason behind it,’’ said an official of the health department.  

  • Children’s facility staffer held for rape, five more girls come forward alleging sexual exploitation in Nashik

    By PTI

    NASHIK: A few days after the director of a private facility for children in Maharashtra’s Nashik district was arrested for allegedly raping a 14-year-old girl, police officials on Sunday said five more girls have spoken about being sexually exploited.

    The first incident, based on which the 28-year-old director was arrested, took place in the children’s shelter in Mhasrul on October 13 but it came to light on November 23 after the girl filed a complaint, the police official said.

    The accused had forcibly taken the 14-year-old victim to a makeshift tin room in the parking area of the building, showed her an obscene video clip on his mobile phone and then raped her, he said.

    ALSO READ | Deaf-mute girl’s rape in Rajasthan: SHRC seeks report from Barmer SP, Collector

    He was arrested after a case of rape and other offences were filed under the Indian Penal Code, Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act and Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.

    “Five more girls have told police they were sexually exploited by the accused. They have been subjected to a medical check-up and the reports are awaited. We have also recorded the statement of the owner of the house from which the shelter was being run,” he said.

    The accused is in police custody till November 30. Further probe based on the new statements and allegations is underway, he added.

    NASHIK: A few days after the director of a private facility for children in Maharashtra’s Nashik district was arrested for allegedly raping a 14-year-old girl, police officials on Sunday said five more girls have spoken about being sexually exploited.

    The first incident, based on which the 28-year-old director was arrested, took place in the children’s shelter in Mhasrul on October 13 but it came to light on November 23 after the girl filed a complaint, the police official said.

    The accused had forcibly taken the 14-year-old victim to a makeshift tin room in the parking area of the building, showed her an obscene video clip on his mobile phone and then raped her, he said.

    ALSO READ | Deaf-mute girl’s rape in Rajasthan: SHRC seeks report from Barmer SP, Collector

    He was arrested after a case of rape and other offences were filed under the Indian Penal Code, Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act and Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.

    “Five more girls have told police they were sexually exploited by the accused. They have been subjected to a medical check-up and the reports are awaited. We have also recorded the statement of the owner of the house from which the shelter was being run,” he said.

    The accused is in police custody till November 30. Further probe based on the new statements and allegations is underway, he added.

  • In UP, children feel the heat of state’s caste-driven politics

    By IANS

    LUCKNOW: In Uttar Pradesh, ‘C is for children and ‘C is also for caste. It is school children who bear the brunt of the prevailing caste politics in the state.

    There are innumerable cases of children being discriminated against in government schools on the basis of caste. Most of them either go unreported or do not invite any action.

    Last year, in Amethi, the principal of a primary school in Gaderi in Sangrampur area was accused of allegedly forming a “separate queue of Dalit children” when they were served the midday meal.

    An FIR was registered against the principal Kusum Soni, under sections of the SC/ST Atrocities Prevention Act and she was suspended.

    The case was also reported to the district magistrate who ordered a probe by the Basic Shiksha Adhikari.

    There was also the case of segregation of utensils used by Dalit students in a government school in Mainpuri district.

    “This has now become a way of life, especially in rural areas. The caste feeling is so dominant now that it is the children who refuse to eat food cooked by a Dalit or sit with children belonging to Dalit castes. We try to sort out the matter in the school itself and it is only when a TV channel highlights the incident that action is taken,” says Ram Prakash Srivastava, a retired school teacher in Ballia.

    Vinay Kumar, the head of a village in an eastern UP constituency, says, “The caste system has gained strong roots and unless the local MLA or MP belongs to a marginalised caste, Dalit children are victimised in schools. Teachers, while beating them or scolding them, use cuss words and caste shame them. I belong to the Dalit community but there is little I can do to protect the children because the local MLA belongs to the upper caste and so do the local officials.”

    Sangita, a class four student who belongs to a Dalit community, says that the school teacher tells her to sit in a separate row and she is also asked to sit away from others when the midday meal is served.

    “Big (read upper caste) children do not play with me and they also get the food first,” she says.

    Sangita says that the only time she is given ‘VIP aur accha kaam (treatment)’ is when ‘mantri ji’ comes to school.

    Her mother, Asha, says that the teacher asks her to put oil on Sangita’s head and comb her hair and she is taught how to speak to the guest. In return she gets candies but once the visit is over, things are back to being worse.

    Radhika Saxena, who works with children belonging to marginalised communities, says that the caste discrimination in schools remains a major factor in keeping the kids, especially girls, away from school.

    ‘The drop-out rate increases as children start growing up and begin to realize that they are being subjected to abusive behaviour. Some male teachers even derive sadistic pleasure by not allowing girls to relieve themselves during school hours and this kind of behaviour is only for Dalits,” she says.

    Radhika says that the problem lies with the social and political system which has become highly caste-oriented and teachers are a part of it.

    “De-sensitizing teachers does not work and now even children are becoming caste conscious which is a highly dangerous trend for the future. I have seen some upper caste children refer to Dalit children with abuses,” she adds.

    A retired IAS officer, who served in the state education department for a long time, admits that government schemes exist mainly on paper and the reality is different.

    “We provide uniforms, shoes, books and other incentives but who checks whether the children are actually getting the benefits. There is no system to check if teachers behave well with children. The human resource factor is missing from the system and books alone will not make schools a better place,” he says.

    LUCKNOW: In Uttar Pradesh, ‘C is for children and ‘C is also for caste. It is school children who bear the brunt of the prevailing caste politics in the state.

    There are innumerable cases of children being discriminated against in government schools on the basis of caste. Most of them either go unreported or do not invite any action.

    Last year, in Amethi, the principal of a primary school in Gaderi in Sangrampur area was accused of allegedly forming a “separate queue of Dalit children” when they were served the midday meal.

    An FIR was registered against the principal Kusum Soni, under sections of the SC/ST Atrocities Prevention Act and she was suspended.

    The case was also reported to the district magistrate who ordered a probe by the Basic Shiksha Adhikari.

    There was also the case of segregation of utensils used by Dalit students in a government school in Mainpuri district.

    “This has now become a way of life, especially in rural areas. The caste feeling is so dominant now that it is the children who refuse to eat food cooked by a Dalit or sit with children belonging to Dalit castes. We try to sort out the matter in the school itself and it is only when a TV channel highlights the incident that action is taken,” says Ram Prakash Srivastava, a retired school teacher in Ballia.

    Vinay Kumar, the head of a village in an eastern UP constituency, says, “The caste system has gained strong roots and unless the local MLA or MP belongs to a marginalised caste, Dalit children are victimised in schools. Teachers, while beating them or scolding them, use cuss words and caste shame them. I belong to the Dalit community but there is little I can do to protect the children because the local MLA belongs to the upper caste and so do the local officials.”

    Sangita, a class four student who belongs to a Dalit community, says that the school teacher tells her to sit in a separate row and she is also asked to sit away from others when the midday meal is served.

    “Big (read upper caste) children do not play with me and they also get the food first,” she says.

    Sangita says that the only time she is given ‘VIP aur accha kaam (treatment)’ is when ‘mantri ji’ comes to school.

    Her mother, Asha, says that the teacher asks her to put oil on Sangita’s head and comb her hair and she is taught how to speak to the guest. In return she gets candies but once the visit is over, things are back to being worse.

    Radhika Saxena, who works with children belonging to marginalised communities, says that the caste discrimination in schools remains a major factor in keeping the kids, especially girls, away from school.

    ‘The drop-out rate increases as children start growing up and begin to realize that they are being subjected to abusive behaviour. Some male teachers even derive sadistic pleasure by not allowing girls to relieve themselves during school hours and this kind of behaviour is only for Dalits,” she says.

    Radhika says that the problem lies with the social and political system which has become highly caste-oriented and teachers are a part of it.

    “De-sensitizing teachers does not work and now even children are becoming caste conscious which is a highly dangerous trend for the future. I have seen some upper caste children refer to Dalit children with abuses,” she adds.

    A retired IAS officer, who served in the state education department for a long time, admits that government schemes exist mainly on paper and the reality is different.

    “We provide uniforms, shoes, books and other incentives but who checks whether the children are actually getting the benefits. There is no system to check if teachers behave well with children. The human resource factor is missing from the system and books alone will not make schools a better place,” he says.

  • Two children burnt alive as thatched house catches fire in Rajasthan’s Pushkar

    By PTI

    JAIPUR: Two children were burnt alive after a thatched house caught fire in Pushkar town of Rajasthan’s Ajmer district on Wednesday, police said.

    The incident took place in Chawandia village where four children were inside a thatched house and their both parents had gone out for work, they said.

    The house apparently caught fire due to a spark from a gas stove. Four children were inside the house.

    Two of them got stuck and burnt alive whereas two others escaped, Pushkar SHO Ravish Samariya said.

    The dead were identified as Pooja (3) and Deepa (1).

    He said the bodies were handed over to family members after a post-mortem.

    JAIPUR: Two children were burnt alive after a thatched house caught fire in Pushkar town of Rajasthan’s Ajmer district on Wednesday, police said.

    The incident took place in Chawandia village where four children were inside a thatched house and their both parents had gone out for work, they said.

    The house apparently caught fire due to a spark from a gas stove. Four children were inside the house.

    Two of them got stuck and burnt alive whereas two others escaped, Pushkar SHO Ravish Samariya said.

    The dead were identified as Pooja (3) and Deepa (1).

    He said the bodies were handed over to family members after a post-mortem.

  • MP: Bajrang Dal, VHP Activists stop vehicle carrying tribal children, allege religious conversion

    By PTI

    KHANDWA: Right-wing activists created ruckus by intercepting a vehicle transporting a group of children to a programme at a school in Madhya Pradesh’s Khandwa on Monday, accusing the organisers of religious conversion, police said.

    The incident occurred when a vehicle was transporting a group of tribal boys and girls to a programme being organised at Saint Pius School in Khandwa, an official said.

    Activists of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Bajrang Dal stopped the vehicle near the school, alleging that the children were being taken for religious conversion.

    According to eye-witnesses, the right-wing activists stopped the vehicle for a long time till the police and district officials reached the spot.

    The VHP’s district secretary Animesh Joshi claimed that they had stopped the vehicle after receiving information that a group of tribal boys and girls were being brought for religious conversion.

    Action should be taken against the organisers, as they were conducting the programme without permission, he said.

    Sub-divisional magistrate (SDM) Arvind Chouhan, who also reached the spot following the incident, said the police were investigating the matter, as the programme was organised without any prior permission.

    The police have recorded the statements of the children, organisers and school teachers and further legal steps will be taken after a probe, he said.

    Meanwhile, Father Jose, the organiser of the programme, claimed that only catholic boys and girls were invited for the programme, and efforts to seek permission for the event from the district administration were not successful.

    KHANDWA: Right-wing activists created ruckus by intercepting a vehicle transporting a group of children to a programme at a school in Madhya Pradesh’s Khandwa on Monday, accusing the organisers of religious conversion, police said.

    The incident occurred when a vehicle was transporting a group of tribal boys and girls to a programme being organised at Saint Pius School in Khandwa, an official said.

    Activists of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Bajrang Dal stopped the vehicle near the school, alleging that the children were being taken for religious conversion.

    According to eye-witnesses, the right-wing activists stopped the vehicle for a long time till the police and district officials reached the spot.

    The VHP’s district secretary Animesh Joshi claimed that they had stopped the vehicle after receiving information that a group of tribal boys and girls were being brought for religious conversion.

    Action should be taken against the organisers, as they were conducting the programme without permission, he said.

    Sub-divisional magistrate (SDM) Arvind Chouhan, who also reached the spot following the incident, said the police were investigating the matter, as the programme was organised without any prior permission.

    The police have recorded the statements of the children, organisers and school teachers and further legal steps will be taken after a probe, he said.

    Meanwhile, Father Jose, the organiser of the programme, claimed that only catholic boys and girls were invited for the programme, and efforts to seek permission for the event from the district administration were not successful.

  • Government primary school children served rice with salt in mid-day meal in Ayodhya

    Express News Service

    Lucknow: The principal of Dihwa Pandey’s primary school in the Chaurebazar area in Ayodhya district was suspended by the district magistrate, on Thursday, for serving merely rice with salt to students in their mid-day meal. Acting on the block development officer (BDO) Amit Kumar Srivastava’s report, district magistrate Nitish Kumar suspended Ekta Yadav, the principal of the school serving a notice to gram pradhan. Officials from the education department have been asked to investigate the whole matter and conduct surprise inspections from time to time.

    The incident came to light on Wednesday when the parents of some of the students thronged the school and captured the entire scene on their mobile phones and made the video viral on social media. In the video, children are seen sitting on the floor and eating the rice-and-salt served under the Mid-Day Meal Scheme of the government.

    As per the local sources, the students had already sounded their parents about the poor quality of food they were getting at the school in the name of mid-day meal.

    On Wednesday, several villagers reached the school and found children eating rice with salt in the mid-day meal leading to huge protest by them. Villagers then approached BDO Amit Kumar and raised the issue with him. Villagers also complained that the principal of the school used to often remain absent duringthe school hours.

    “The teacher refuses to take responsibility, and the pradhan (village head) also refuses. Who is responsible then?” says the person filming, whose face is not visible on camera. “You can see all these children are eating rice and salt. Who will want to send their children to such a school? Yogi baba (Chief MinisterYogi Adityanath) should watch this video,” the videographer can be heard saying while giving a glimpse of the school.

    After suspending the principal, Ayodhya District Magistrate Nitish Kumar, confirmed that the incident had taken place on Tuesday. “I have ordered an enquiry into the incident. The enquiry will be conducted by Basic Siksha Adhikari (BSA). The principal has also been suspended,” said the DM.

    In 2019, a similar incident was reported from Mirzapur in eastern UP where in a government primary school, students were being served roti and salt. In fact, under the Mid-Day Meal scheme, the government schools procure wheat and rice from food procurement agencies besides getting compensation for thecooking costs at the rate of Rs 4.97 per student for primary classes and Rs 7.45 for upper primary classes from the state government.

    Each school is provided with a fixed amount to procure ingredients such as pulses, vegetables, oil, salt, spices, turmeric and LPG. The amount of mid-day meals provided to the schools is according to the number of students. Under the national programme, 60% of the cooking cost is shared by the Centre and 40% by the state.

    As per the sources, under the scheme, a student from any government or government-aided primary school is to be served a meal with a minimum content of 300 calories and 8-12 grams of protein a day for a minimum of 200 days.

     As per the menu of the mid-day meal, the students should get vegetables with chapatis along with a fruit on Monday. On Tuesday, they have to be served with dal and rice followed by vegetable pulao and milk on Wednesday. On Thursday, the children should get Dal with Chapatis followed by the vegetable pulao on Friday and a curry with rice on Saturday.

    Lucknow: The principal of Dihwa Pandey’s primary school in the Chaurebazar area in Ayodhya district was suspended by the district magistrate, on Thursday, for serving merely rice with salt to students in their mid-day meal. Acting on the block development officer (BDO) Amit Kumar Srivastava’s report, district magistrate Nitish Kumar suspended Ekta Yadav, the principal of the school serving a notice to gram pradhan. Officials from the education department have been asked to investigate the whole matter and conduct surprise inspections from time to time.

    The incident came to light on Wednesday when the parents of some of the students thronged the school and captured the entire scene on their mobile phones and made the video viral on social media. In the video, children are seen sitting on the floor and eating the rice-and-salt served under the Mid-Day Meal Scheme of the government.

    As per the local sources, the students had already sounded their parents about the poor quality of food they were getting at the school in the name of mid-day meal.

    On Wednesday, several villagers reached the school and found children eating rice with salt in the mid-day meal leading to huge protest by them. Villagers then approached BDO Amit Kumar and raised the issue with him. Villagers also complained that the principal of the school used to often remain absent during
    the school hours.

    “The teacher refuses to take responsibility, and the pradhan (village head) also refuses. Who is responsible then?” says the person filming, whose face is not visible on camera. “You can see all these children are eating rice and salt. Who will want to send their children to such a school? Yogi baba (Chief Minister
    Yogi Adityanath) should watch this video,” the videographer can be heard saying while giving a glimpse of the school.

    After suspending the principal, Ayodhya District Magistrate Nitish Kumar, confirmed that the incident had taken place on Tuesday. “I have ordered an enquiry into the incident. The enquiry will be conducted by Basic Siksha Adhikari (BSA). The principal has also been suspended,” said the DM.

    In 2019, a similar incident was reported from Mirzapur in eastern UP where in a government primary school, students were being served roti and salt. In fact, under the Mid-Day Meal scheme, the government schools procure wheat and rice from food procurement agencies besides getting compensation for the
    cooking costs at the rate of Rs 4.97 per student for primary classes and Rs 7.45 for upper primary classes from the state government.

    Each school is provided with a fixed amount to procure ingredients such as pulses, vegetables, oil, salt, spices, turmeric and LPG. The amount of mid-day meals provided to the schools is according to the number of students. Under the national programme, 60% of the cooking cost is shared by the Centre and 40% by the state.

    As per the sources, under the scheme, a student from any government or government-aided primary school is to be served a meal with a minimum content of 300 calories and 8-12 grams of protein a day for a minimum of 200 days.

     As per the menu of the mid-day meal, the students should get vegetables with chapatis along with a fruit on Monday. On Tuesday, they have to be served with dal and rice followed by vegetable pulao and milk on Wednesday. On Thursday, the children should get Dal with Chapatis followed by the vegetable pulao on Friday and a curry with rice on Saturday.

  • Gay family joins Peppa Pig

    By AFP

    LONDON: Children’s TV show “Peppa Pig” now features a lesbian couple among its much-loved cast of characters, in a development hailed by rights campaigners.

    In an episode called “Families” that aired on Britain’s Channel 5 on Tuesday, Penny Polar Bear tells Peppa about her two mothers.

    “One mummy is a doctor and one mummy cooks spaghetti,” Penny says. “I love spaghetti.”

    Robbie de Santos of LGBTQ rights charity Stonewall said the same-sex family’s appearance in Peppatown was “fantastic”.

    “Many of those who watch the show will have two mums or two dads themselves, and it will mean a lot to parents and children that their experiences are being represented on such an iconic children’s programme,” he told the BBC.

    One Twitter user said: “An autistic character in ‘Thomas the Tank Engine’ and a kid with two mums in ‘Peppa Pig’… it’s been a good day for representation!”

    “Thomas the Tank Engine”, another iconic UK production also shown on Channel 5, is introducing the autistic Bruno the Brake Car later this month, in collaboration with autistic writers and campaigners.

    On-screen gay representation remains controversial in some quarters, however.

    The big-budget Hollywood films “Thor: Love and Thunder”, “Lightyear” and “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” have all attracted attention from censors in the Middle East for featuring gay references.

    And it is not the first time that Peppa Pig has attracted wider political commentary.

    Last November, then British prime minister Boris Johnson lost his place in a speech, and extemporised about a recent visit to a Peppa theme park during a rambling section that also saw him imitate an accelerating car.

    LONDON: Children’s TV show “Peppa Pig” now features a lesbian couple among its much-loved cast of characters, in a development hailed by rights campaigners.

    In an episode called “Families” that aired on Britain’s Channel 5 on Tuesday, Penny Polar Bear tells Peppa about her two mothers.

    “One mummy is a doctor and one mummy cooks spaghetti,” Penny says. “I love spaghetti.”

    Robbie de Santos of LGBTQ rights charity Stonewall said the same-sex family’s appearance in Peppatown was “fantastic”.

    “Many of those who watch the show will have two mums or two dads themselves, and it will mean a lot to parents and children that their experiences are being represented on such an iconic children’s programme,” he told the BBC.

    One Twitter user said: “An autistic character in ‘Thomas the Tank Engine’ and a kid with two mums in ‘Peppa Pig’… it’s been a good day for representation!”

    “Thomas the Tank Engine”, another iconic UK production also shown on Channel 5, is introducing the autistic Bruno the Brake Car later this month, in collaboration with autistic writers and campaigners.

    On-screen gay representation remains controversial in some quarters, however.

    The big-budget Hollywood films “Thor: Love and Thunder”, “Lightyear” and “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” have all attracted attention from censors in the Middle East for featuring gay references.

    And it is not the first time that Peppa Pig has attracted wider political commentary.

    Last November, then British prime minister Boris Johnson lost his place in a speech, and extemporised about a recent visit to a Peppa theme park during a rambling section that also saw him imitate an accelerating car.

  • Goverment to release benefits under PM CARES for Children tomorrow 

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will release benefits under the ‘PM CARES for Children’ on Monday via video-conferencing, the Ministry of Women and Child Development said on Sunday.

    The government had launched the initiative on May 29 last year to support children who lost parents, legal guardian, adoptive parents or surviving parent to COVID-19 from March 11, 2020, to February 28, 2022.

    In a statement, the ministry said the prime minister will transfer scholarships to school-going children. A PM CARES for Children passbook and health card under Ayushman Bharat – Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana will also be handed over to them, it added.

    The children, along with their guardians and the district magistrate concerned, will join the event through virtual mode. The event will be attended by ministers, MPs and MLAs of the respective states and union territories, it said.

    The objective of the scheme is to ensure comprehensive care and protection of children in a sustained manner by providing them boarding and lodging, empowering them through education and scholarships, equipping them for self-sufficient existence with financial support of Rs 10 lakh on attaining 23 years of age and ensuring their well-being through health insurance.

    The portal “http://pmcaresforchildren.in/” is a single window system that facilitates approval process and all other assistance for children under the scheme.