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Congress Leader Shankersinh Vaghela Demands Pre-Release Screening Of Padmavati

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AHMEDABAD -- Former Congress leader Shankersinh Vaghela on Tuesday demanded a pre-release screening of movie "Padmavati" for Hindu and Kshatriya community leaders to check whether facts have been distorted in the film and warned of violent protests if its makers failed to do so.

"As the movie is expected to be released on December 1, I want Bhansali to first show it to Hindu as well as Kshatriya leaders as people suspect that some facts have been distorted and presented in a wrong way in the movie," the Kshatriya strongman told reporters here.

The film, directed by Sanjay Leela Bhansali and starring Deepika Padukone, Ranveer Singh and Shahid Kapoor, is scheduled for release on December 1.

Vaghela said one cannot tamper with historical facts and present them as per one's wishes to get "cheap publicity".

"If the movie is released without pre-screening, Gujarat will witness violent protests and law and order may go out of control. I apologise to the cinema owners in advance if people take law into their hands," the former Gujarat chief minister said.

Vaghela quit the Congress after the Rajya Sabha polls in August and launched a new front, Jan Vikalp, which would field its candidates on all the 182 seats in Gujarat, where assembly elections will be held in December in two phases.

The upcoming movie had earlier run into controversy after Rajasthan-based Rajput community group Karni Sena raised objections over depictions in the movie, claiming that history was being distorted.

Earlier this year, Bhansali was attacked by Karni Sena members during the shooting of the film in Rajasthan.

Last month, alleged Karni Sena members burnt posters of the film after the first look of main characters -- Padmavati (Deepika Padukone), Maharawal Ratan Singh (Shahid Kapoor) and Allaudin Khilji (Ranveer Singh) -- was released.

They also threatened to oppose the screening of the movie in theaters if the facts were distorted. "Padmavati" is slated to release on December 1.


Pakistan Court Issues Arrest Warrant Against Former PM Nawaz Sharif

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ISLAMABAD -- An accountability court on Thursday issued bailable warrants against ousted Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in cases relating to two of his properties, the media reported.

The Islamabad-based court wrapped up the first hearing in the Sharif family's London flats case after grilling the former leader's guranteer about his absence from the hearing, reports Dawn news.

The bailable warrants were issued for the Flagship Investment case and the Al-Azizia Steel Mills and Hill Metal Establishment case.

Meanwhile, the hearing on the Avenfield flats in London was adjourned until November 3.

The court had indicted Nawaz Sharif, his daughter Maryam Nawaz and her husband Captain Mohammad Safdar on October 19 in connection with a case pertaining to the Avenfield flats filed against them by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB).

The former Prime Minister was separately indicted in the Al-Azizia Steel Mills and Hill Metal Establishment cases.

All three accused pleaded not guilty to the charges, Dawn news reported.

Nawaz Sharif's sons Hassan and Hussain Nawaz were named co-accused in the charge-sheet.

Maryam and Safdar appeared before the court on Thursday but Nawaz Sharif failed to appear in as he is currently in Saudi Arabia with his mother.

A five-member bench of the Supreme Court on July 28 had directed the NAB to file cases against Nawaz Sharif and his children in six weeks in the accountability court and directed the trial court to decide the cases within six months.

The former premier and his two sons have been named in all three NAB cases, while Maryam and Safdar were named only in the Avenfield case.

Indian Orphanage Official Says 3-Year-Old Sherin Mathews Had No Trouble Drinking Milk Before Her Adoption

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Wesley Mathews, 37, arrested for suspected child endangerment for the treatment of his three-year old daughter after he punished her for not drinking her milk by telling her to stand outside by herself at night near an alley behind her home,  is shown in this police booking photo in Richardson, Texas, U.S., provided October 9, 2017.

DALLAS — The owner of a now-closed orphanage in India where a young girl was living before a Texas couple adopted her last year says the child had no difficulty eating despite her adoptive father's account to police when reporting her missing.

The body of 3-year-old Sherin Mathews was found Sunday in suburban Dallas in a culvert under a road about a half-mile from her parents' home. Police and volunteers had been searching for the girl since Oct. 7.

Investigators have said that her father, Wesley Mathews, initially told them he had sent the girl outside at 3 a.m. on Oct. 7 to stand near a tree across the alley from the family's fence because she refused to drink her milk. He said he went to check on her after about 15 minutes.

Mathews told police the girl had been malnourished when she was adopted and needed to eat whenever she was awake to help her gain weight. But orphanage owner Babitha Kumari told television station WFAA the girl had no problems and that Wesley and Sini Mathews appeared loving when they were going through the adoption process.

"The child had no problem at all when she was here, neither in drinking milk or eating," Kumari said.

A phone call to the international adoption agency believed to have helped the couple adopt Sherin was not returned Wednesday.

Wesley Mathews was initially charged with endangering or abandoning a child after reporting the girl missing on Oct. 7. He changed his story to police Monday, saying the girl choked on milk and died in the family's garage before he took her body away. He was arrested and charged with felony injury to a child, which carries a sentence of up to life in prison.

Mathews was transferred to the Dallas County jail on Wednesday, which is routine for inmates charged with higher level felonies. The Dallas County Sheriff's Department said he has been placed on suicide watch.

A judge reviewed his bond and left it at $1 million.

Mitch Nolte, an attorney for Sini Mathews, said in a written statement Wednesday that she has submitted to several long interviews with police since Oct. 7, and because she had nothing to do with the "death or removal" of the child's body, her lawyers see no need for her to "endure further police interrogation."

What Exactly Is Cultural Appropriation? Here's What You Need To Know

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We're going to take a wild guess these two aren't Native American.

Cultural appropriation has been a hot topic of debate lately. Marc Jacobs sparked headlines around the world last year with his spring 2017 show which featured white models such as Gigi Hadid walking down the catwalk in fake dreadlocks.

In recent years so many people have worn Native American war bonnets and feathered headdresses to the popular Burning Man Festival, members of the Burning Man community (note: not the festival organisers, but the HYBYCOZO art crew who regularly contribute artworks to the event) wrote an opinion piece begging festival goers to 'listen up before dressing up'.

In May, Chanel came under fire for selling a boomerang 'accessory' for close to $2000; while Katy Perry was accused of appropriating Japanese culture due to her geisha-inspired performance at the American Music Awards.

While the media interest in the topic has some people throwing their arms up in the air and lamenting, 'am I not allowed to do anything anymore?', others would argue that it's a vital conversation well worth having, and having often. Particularly when incidents of blackface are still taking place, and let's all agree on one thing: blackface is not okay.

So ahead of Halloween, where dressing up in costume is pretty much mandatory (yes, yes, we know it's not an Australian tradition, but you can't sweep it under the rug completely) we thought we'd go back to the basics of cultural appropriation: what it is, how to strike a balance and the things you should definitely, definitely not dress up as next Tuesday.

What is cultural appropriation?

Cultural appropriation is defined as "the act of taking or using things from a culture that is not your own, especially without showing that you understand or respect this culture."

While this sounds simple enough, in our digital, globalised society the lines between something that's obviously offensive (blackface) and something that might be considered as embracing another culture (exotic cuisine) can be blurry.

"When I try to think about how to define it, the way I've come to now think of it is not necessarily so much about cross cultural engagement as it is an indication of a strong split that's going on," Dr Shameem Black from the department of gender, media and cultural studies at ANU College of Asia and the Pacific told HuffPost Australia.

"To me, the real split is between how enthusiastically a cultural product or process from a part of the world is received and how enthusiastically the people from that region are received."

Katy Perry performs "Unconditionally" at the 41st American Music Awards.

When is cultural appropriation bad? Or not?

It's important to note that it's often perfectly okay to take on aspects of another culture. In fact, there are many benefits.

"I think the benefits are obvious. It can encourage creativity, for instance. There are lots examples in the history of art whereby people borrow from other cultures in a very creative way," associate professor at La Trobe University and author of 'Taking Responsibility for the Past', Janna Thompson, told HuffPost Australia.

"For example, Picasso did a lot of borrowing from African art, and Monet and many other artists were inspired by Chinese and Japanese art.

"Another benefit could be a kind of fostering of communication between cultures, especially if it's not all one way. People learning about the preconceptions and ways of thinking of a different culture through their art or other things that are appropriate.

"There are obviously benefits of appropriation and of course it can lead to people in countries, particularly third world countries, becoming known for what they do and appreciated for what they do.

"I think the word appropriation is loaded. It suggests exploitation or taking something away from somebody. I think of appropriation in a sense of making use of ideas and others is quite valuable. I think what's important is, first of all, consent."

When you look at the Native American headdress, we are talking about a group that has been dispossessed and dis-empowered, with many, many killed -- we're talking really serious histories of violence.Dr Shameem Black

Now this is where we delve into the balancing act between cultural appreciation and causing cultural offence.

"In general I think there is nothing wrong with cultures borrowing ideas [and] artistic styles from each other," Thompson told HuffPost Australia. "But there are two factors which can make this appropriation a 'rip off'.

"One is the commercial advantages that can be reaped by Westerners by 'borrowing' from traditional cultures or disadvantaged groups. The other is that traditional cultures often do not have the same ideas as Westerners about the role of cultural artefacts."

Take the Native American headdress, for example. Are many Native American communities benefiting from its worldwide commercial use? Probably not. And are the Native Americans thrilled about Americans (or others) pairing their traditional war bonnets with a silver bikini and fur boots for the ultimate Burning Man outfit? If you're unsure of the answer, listen to what Black has to say.

"When you look at the Native American headdress, we are talking about a group that has been dispossessed and disempowered, with many, many killed -- we're talking really serious histories of violence.

The best experience of my life! #burningman #burningman2017 #burnergirls

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"So something as small as being able to make economic returns off this kind of interest... I can see how that becomes a real source of concern. That's not to say economic returns solve everything. I think some people would say, even if Native Americans were making money off it, it would still be problematic because of the histories of violence."

So, yeah. You might want to rethink the war bonnet as being this season's hottest festival accessory.

Black also makes the point that while some aspects of a culture are 'embraced' in Western society, the people from whom that practice or item comes from are not.

"I think where the energy behind cultural appropriation comes from is when people feel they've migrated from a part of the world -- so for example India, where my mother is from -- and people will often come and say, 'Oh today a cultural process like yoga is very popular in Australia and the U.S. That's wonderful.' But by the same token, many people who came from the Indian subcontinent are subject in 'other-ing' in these countries," Black told HuffPost Australia.

"I think there's a real question around 'Why is yoga more welcome than I am?' I think there's a lot of frustration around that.

"I want to make it clear I'm just speaking metaphorically [and using yoga] as a kind of rhetorical device, but it is true that a lot of these practices have become more commercially viable or moved into different economies than they once were in."

A model with fake dreadlocks walks down the catwalk at Marc Jacobs' controversial 2017 Spring show.

How can I appreciate a culture without appropriating it?

This is a good question, especially because many people aren't trying to cause offence, aren't profiting from anything and simply want to admire a culture that isn't theirs.

"I don't necessarily think there are wrong ways or right ways. Perhaps the most productive way to go about it is asking questions about when we are drawn to a culture or practice that isn't something we are automatically connected to," Black suggested.

"I think we can certainly use these opportunities to learn about histories and reflect on our own. How did we get to this point? That kind of self searching is really positive on an individual level and societal level."

But Black hesitates to draw a definitive line in the sand between the 'good' sort of cultural appropriation and the bad.

I will say I think it would be terrible if we only thought we are allowed to hold things close to us that are from our own culture.Dr Shameem Black

"I'm not sure there ever are lines," she said. "Or if there are lines, they are mobile and they will change as our conversations in society will change.

"I will say I think it would be terrible if we only thought we are allowed to hold things close to us that are from our own culture."

Thompson is more concrete.

"I don't think anyone should expropriate things without asking the people who created them for their consent," she said. "If they don't give their consent, you should try to communicate with them about what can be taken or used. And they should always get a proper return, if commercialisation is involved. As much as possible there should be a two-way equal exchange."

Just a normal day on Tinder. 😧 #racists #blackface #tinder #onlinedating_sucks #tinderfail

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Not cool.

But what if you're just a Jane Doe, with no commercial interest?

"I think people should understand at least where these things come from," Thompson said. "For instance, most people would know it's wrong to blacken their faces because of the history, it's an insulting thing to do. People need to be aware of the history of these things and ensure they're not just insulting others."

And while you might be a small fry in the scheme of things, it doesn't mean you can absolve responsibility completely.

Does the culture you're interested in have a history of violence and/or oppression? Would an indigenous culture have benefit from the commercialisation of this particular product? Are you able to simply remove something when you get bored of it (for example, black face paint or a fake tribal tattoo) when others can't?

Which, finally, brings us to...

Halloween costumes (and all other forms of dress up)

We get it. Dressing up is fun, and pretty much the whole point of it is to be able to pretend you're something different to yourself. (Unless you're Kit Harington who went to a costume party as his own character Jon Snow, but that's another story for another time).

But can we please remind people of the literal MILLIONS of costumes you can dress up in that aren't offensive to others?

"When it comes to costumes, the problematic area seems to be people dressing up in costume form someone else's traditional culture," Jeffrey Browitt, associate professor in Latin American studies at the University of Technology Sydney told HuffPost Australia.

"And often people who dress up in costumes like that are not setting out to be insulting. But it can be insulting to the people whose culture they are mimicking.

"When you dress up as an American Indian on Halloween or do blackface or put on a hijab or something like that, that's when it becomes a question of cultural appropriation. Because often we are talking about people who are or have been an oppressed minority. If you are in the U.S. and are dressing up as a Native American, I would say that's highly offensive because of the power differentials."

Stay classy people. . . . . . . . . . . #halloweencostume #halloween #racism #blackface

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Better.

You might say people are being overly sensitive, but as both Browitt and Black point out, it's a sensitive and uncertain time.

"In some ways we are seeing the failures of the promise of globalisation. It was meant to provide this easy wonderful borderless world, but the realities are much more complicated," Black said.

"There are very complex and often disturbing experiences people have had in the last few decades, and this question has now started to have an intensity [that wasn't there] when people were more optimistic where the future might go."

So. Costumes. Here's the lowdown.

"The best rule of thumb is to play it safe, dress up as a witch or a goblin and leave the ethnic costumes to one side," Browitt said. "No Indian headdress, no ethnic dress from cultures that don't belong to you in any way, and which, by the way, have nothing to do with Halloween. Halloween is a pagan Celtic tradition, so if nothing else [ethnic dress] would be inappropriate for the occasion, anyway."

Star Plus Allegedly Decided Against Telecasting Comedian's Modi Parody As It Feared 'Protests'

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In yet another instance of fear dictating art, comedian Shyam Rangeela's mimicry of Prime Minister Narendra Modi was allegedly dropped by Star Plus as the channel felt it might incite protests across the country.

Rangeela's parody was to appear in one of the episodes of Star's comedy-based reality show, The Great Indian Laughter Challenge. A month after recording his segment, Rangeela was told by channel execs that the bit would not be aired.

In an interview with The Wire, Rangeela said, "The production team told me that the decision to not air my act was taken because the channel feared that it will offend some people and they might protest against them."

The comedian, who was specially invited by the channel after his videos went viral online, was categorically told not to submit any new material that satirised Modi.

But they were initially open to doing segments on Rahul Gandhi.

"But later they told me I can't do Rahul either," Rangeela told The Wire.

Ironically enough, Star India's CEO, Uday Shankar, in an interview to this writer, had said that censorship by mob rule is choking the industry.

He had said, "Censorship is choking the business and that is precisely why the industry must take it up. But nobody takes up the issue! When someone talks about it, it becomes the exception than the norm."

He had further said that we're reaching a point of 'anarchy'. "This is dangerous because it's creating a culture of anarchy. The mob is taking control. And within the mob, it's the loudest member that is taking charge."

HuffPost India reached out to the channel's spokesperson, Preeti Puri Sharma, for a comment but is yet to receive a response.

Also see on HuffPost:

Kingpin Of Fake Stamp Paper Scam, Abdul Karim Telgi, Dies In Bengaluru

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Abdul Karim Telgi, a convict in counterfeit stamp paper scam, who had been in a critical condition, has died in a Bengaluru hospital.

The Hindu reported that Telgi was declared dead at 3:55 pm on Thursday even has he had been in hospital for the past one week for meningitis and multi organ failure.

Telgi was in an inmate at the Parappana Agrahara Central Jailin Bengaluru, after being sentenced to 30 years rigorous imprisonment in connection to the multi-crore fake stamp paper scam.

Indian Express reported that Telgi was also undergoing treatment for HIV/AIDS.

DIG (Prisons) D Roopa had revealed in July that Telgi had been enjoying special privileges inside prison including massages by other inmates.

Telgi was convicted in 2007, along with others, for running a scam where he sold fake stamp papers to banks, insurance companies and brokerage firms.

He was also fined Rs 202 crore for his crimes.

Environmental Destruction, Inequality And Loneliness. Why Capitalism Is Broken.

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When everything seems to be changing, it becomes increasingly important to know what endures.

A timely reminder of this has come this week thanks to the auction in Israel of a small note that the physicist Albert Einstein gave to a Japanese courier in 1922.

“A quiet and modest life brings more joy than a pursuit of success bound with constant unrest,” the note written on Imperial Hotel Tokyo stationery reads. 

Gal Wiener, owner and manager of the Winner's auction house in Jerusalem, displays two notes written by Albert Einstein

The note comes to light as more people are starting to reevaluate what success actually means and the purpose behind their increasingly fast-moving and complex lives.

Einstein’s scribbled message also aligns with a growing “new economy” movement that points out that our current form of capitalism, which puts the pursuit of success and profit as top priorities, is not only leading to unprecedented environmental destruction but is also increasing social inequality.

That inequality is one reason why people do not appear to be happier despite an expanding economy.

In a study of 16 developed countries, Selin Kesebir, assistant professor of Organisational Behaviour at London Business School, found that when income inequality is high, an increase in gross domestic product per capita was “virtually unrelated to life satisfaction.”

Writing in the Harvard Business Review, she concluded that “what we can say for sure is that it’s a fallacy to equate GDP with well-being. It’s not a foregone conclusion that growing the economy will make for a happier people.”

She also points to the data which shows that despite the post-war economic boom in America between 1946 and 1970, surveys showed no improvement in happiness.

That remains true today, with a United Nations World Happiness Study released in March 2017 showing that while the U.S. ranked third for happiness among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in 2007, it had fallen to 19th by 2016. 

That’s not surprising when you see that the U.S. is facing an unprecedented opioid addiction crisis, while research presented at the American Psychological Association convention in August showed that loneliness and social isolation may represent a greater public health hazard than obesity and is getting worse.

Meanwhile, new analysis unveiled earlier this year showed that Americans are experiencing mental health problems in record numbers.

Some economists, such as the U.K.’s Kate Raworth and Tim Jackson, are calling for a complete rethink in the way we measure success, moving away from an obsession with GDP growth towards broader measures of wellness that include data on happiness and social stability.

Spiritual leaders are also recommending a fundamental change in the way success is measured and point out that our desires for success tend to lead only to suffering. 

Pope Francis has issued several scathing critiques of the current capitalist system.

“Let us not be afraid to say it: we want change, real change, structural change,” the pope said, during a speech in Bolivia in 2015. He added that the capitalist system “has imposed the mentality of profit at any price, with no concern for social exclusion or the destruction of nature.”

 This system is by now intolerable: farm workers find it intolerable, laborers find it intolerable, communities find it intolerable, peoples find it intolerable. The earth itself – our sister, Mother Earth, as Saint Francis would say – also finds it intolerable.

Zen Buddhist Master Thich Nhat Hanh also echoes Einstein’s words of wisdom. “If you have a healthy desire, such as a wish to protect life, or protect the environment, or live a simple life with time to take care of yourself and your beloved ones, your desire will bring you to happiness,” he writes in his 2001 book “Calming the Fearful Mind.” 

Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh

“If you run after power, wealth, sex and fame, thinking that they will bring you happiness, you are consuming a very dangerous type of food and it will bring you a lot of suffering. You can see this is true just by looking around you,” he added.

Nhat Hanh recounted speaking with a business leader running a global company with more than 300,000 employees.

“He shared that people who are very rich are often extremely lonely because they are suspicious of others,” he wrote. “They think anyone who approaches them in friendship only does so because of their money and only wants to take advantage of them. They feel they do not have any real friends.”

The corporate world is starting to wake up to Einstein’s idea that a focus only on the pursuit of success can lead to constant unrest.

The World Business Council for Sustainable Development, which represents more than 200 of the world’s largest corporations, has been carrying out research into what it terms the “The Good Life.”  

Its recommendations very much fit into Einstein’s note. Julian Hill-Landolt, the council’s director of Sustainable Lifestyles, calls on brands to “rethink the picture of the world that they paint through their advertising. We’re not asking them to stop selling their products, we’re just asking them to stop selling their products in a world that is all about bigger, faster, and more.” 

“The [Good Life] Playbook shows how people are already taking pleasure from a different type of world, one where time with friends and family, health and good food are all luxuries to aspire to,” he said. “At the end of the day, this isn’t rocket science. We’re suggesting that forward-looking brands should check the structural integrity of their messaging.”

It can sometimes seem an impossible task for those that are seeking to transform the capitalist system, and help move away from the mantra of short-termism and profit maximization.

But for those who may start to lose hope that it is possible to create an economic system that generates prosperity for all within environmental limits, Einstein has another piece of wisdom that is worth remembering.

He wrote another short note to the Japanese courier in gratitude for delivering a message to him, which also sold at the same auction. It’s message: “Where there’s a will, there’s a way.” 

25 Tweets About Married Life That Are Hilariously Accurate

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Marriage is a surprisingly universal experience, and we have the tweets to prove it

Below, 25 spot-on tweets you’ll definitely identify with if you’re a husband or wife. 

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Funny Tweets About Married Life

This Is The 'Harry Potter' Synopsis Publishers Rejected Over 20 Years Ago

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Back in 1995, J.K. Rowling wrote a synopsis of the first “Harry Potter” book to send to publishers, and it was flatly rejected. Today, 20 years after the beloved series was finally published, the world can read the summary so many passed up. 

The synopsis is on display as part of the British Library’s “Harry Potter: A History of Magic” exhibition celebrating the series’ 20th anniversary.

But for those fans who might not be able to make it to the U.K., Scholastic is offering a chance to experience the magic with the new book Harry Potter: A Journey Through A History of Magic. Inside the book is a copy of that rejected first synopsis, written by Rowling for Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone.

“Over a period of nigh on a year, the book was turned down by more or less every major publishing house in the U.K.,” Rowling’s first agent, Christopher Little, previously told HuffPost. “Various reasons were given including the story being too long, the fact that a story set in a children’s boarding school might feel too ‘exclusive’ to many readers, etc.”

The submission ― which included the synopsis above and the opening chapters of the first book ― ultimately “captured the interest of the Bloomsbury editorial team.” The book was eventually published in the U.K. in 1997 by Bloomsbury and published in 1998 in the U.S. under the title Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.

Rowling has been open about what those rejections taught her

The hard copy of the synopsis is currently on display at the British Library exhibit until Feb. 28, 2018. 

Read the full synopsis below:  

Harry Potter lives with his aunt, uncle and cousin because his parents died in a car-crash — or so he has been told. The Dursleys don’t like Harry asking questions; in fact, they don’t seem to like anything about him, especially the very odd things that keep happening around him (which Harry himself can’t explain).

The Dursleys’ greatest fear is that Harry will discover the truth about himself, so when letters start arriving for him near his eleventh birthday, he isn’t allowed to read them. However, the Dursleys aren’t dealing with an ordinary postman, and at midnight on Harry’s birthday the gigantic Rubeus Hagrid breaks down the door to make sure Harry gets to read his post at last. Ignoring the horrified Dursleys, Hagrid informs Harry that he is a wizard, and the letter he gives Harry explains that he is expected at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry in a month’s time.

To the Dursleys’ fury, Hagrid also reveals the truth about Harry’s past. Harry did not receive the scar on his forehead in a car-crash; it is really the mark of the great dark sorcerer Voldemort, who killed Harry’s mother and father but mysteriously couldn’t kill him, even though he was a baby at the time. Harry is famous among the witches and wizards who live in secret all over the country because Harry’s miraculous survival marked Voldemort’s downfall.

So Harry, who has never had friends or family worth the name, sets off for a new life in the wizarding world. He takes a trip to London with Hagrid to buy his Hogwarts equipment (robes, wand, cauldron, beginners’ draft and potion kit) and shortly afterwards, sets off for Hogwarts from Kings Cross Station (platform nine and three quarters) to follow in his parents’ footsteps.

Harry makes friends with Ronald Weasley (sixth in his family to go to Hogwarts and tired of having to use second-hand spellbooks) and Hermione Granger (cleverest girl in the year and the only person in the class to know all the uses of dragon’s blood). Together, they have their first lessons in magic — astronomy up on the tallest tower at two in the morning, herbology out in the greenhouses where the madrakes and wolfsbane are kept, potions down in the dungeons with the loathsome Severus Snape. Harry, Ron and Hermione discover the schoool’s secret passageways, learn how to deal with Peeves the poltergeist and how to tackle an angry mountain troll: best of all, Harry becomes a star player at Quidditch (wizard football played on broomsticks). 

What interest Harry and his friends most, though, is why the corridor on the third floor is so heavily guarded. Following up a clue dropped by Hagrid (who, when he is not delivering letters, is Hogwarts’ gamekeeper), they discover that the only Philosopher’s Stone in existence is being kept at Hogwarts, a stone with powers to give limitless wealth and eternal life. Harry, Ron and Hermione seem to be the only people who have realised that Snape the potions master is planning to steal the stone - and what terrible things it  could do in the wrong hands. For the Philosopher’s Stone is all that is needed to bring Voldemort back to full strength and power ... it seems Harry has come to Hogwarts to meet his parents’ killer face to face - with no idea how he survived last time ... 

Also on HuffPost
Magical Books Straight Out Of "Harry Potter"

Ikea's Sexist TV Ad Tells Women They Are Nothing Without A Boyfriend

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Ikea is catching heat for a sexist television commercial in mainland China that it has now pulled from the air.

The Swedish furniture company’s ad shows a mother berating her 20-something daughter for not bringing a boyfriend home for dinner. She tells the young woman not to call her “mom” if she fails to bring someone back for the next meal, per the BBC.

A man who the daughter claims is her partner then suddenly arrives at the door, and her parents react in delight ― surrounded by Ikea products.

The implication that the woman is nothing to her mother unless she has a boyfriend riled some viewers. They labelled Ikea’s 30-second spot, above, “sexist” and “twisted,” reports Global News.

Critics also accused Ikea of making light of the stigma surrounding single women in China, who are often scorned as “leftover women” if they don’t marry by age 27. 

Ikea apologized for the tone-deaf ad over Weibo, China’s Twitter-like micro-blogging service, on Tuesday:

We understand the concern caused by this TV advertisement and sincerely apologize for giving the wrong perception,” the company wrote. Ikea “encourages people to live many different lifestyles” and sees gender equality as a “fundamental part” of its culture and values, the statement said.

Linda Xu, Ikea’s China spokeswoman, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that the ad had been “withdrawn from all channels.”

The founder of Chinese retail consultancy Nofashion, Tang Xiaotang, told the South China Morning Post that foreign companies should be “very careful” when it came to topics “related to nationalism and women’s rights” in China because “both are areas of high sensitivity.”

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Here's Why 'Vaginal Seeding' Is Dangerous For Newborns

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There's always some new birth trend that makes parents wonder whether they too should hop on the bandwagon.

Some, such as professional birth photography and eating your own placenta, are relatively harmless.

But experts are now warning that vaginal seeding, where an infant born by caesarean section is swabbed with fluids from a mother's vagina, could pass potentially-dangerous bacteria and illnesses such as sexually transmitted infections to the newborn.

The very real risks outweigh the potential benefits.Dr. Christopher Zahn

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists released new guidelines this week cautioning against the practice.

"Understandably, patients who may need to undergo a C-section are increasingly seeking counsel from ob-gyns on whether vaginal seeding is appropriate," Christopher Zahn, M.D., vice president of Practice Activities for the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, said in a statement.

"However, due to the lack of sufficient data, the very real risks outweigh the potential benefits. By swabbing an infant's mouth, nose or skin with vaginal fluid after birth, the mother could potentially, and unknowingly, pass on disease-causing bacteria or viruses."

C-Sections In Canada

In Canada, 27 per cent of births were by C-section in 2013, according to the Canadian Institute For Health Information.

The rate is higher in older moms, with one Ontario study finding that 43 per cent of women over age 40 gave birth by C-section. Older women are more likely to face complications that could result in the need for a C-section, the National Post reports, but something called "precious baby" syndrome also plays a role.

"You've either tried a long time to get pregnant, or you've had IVF and finally you get pregnant and you say, 'I can't take any chances, I'm going to have a cesarean section,'" Dr. Michael Klein, a professor emeritus at the University of British Columbia and senior scientist emeritus at the Child and Family Research Institute, told the National Post.

Why Is Vaginal Seeding Popular?

A baby born by C-section isn't exposed to the same birth canal bacteria that a vaginal birth provides.

The thought is that "seeding" this bacteria usually by swiping a cotton swab with the mother's vaginal fluids on it against the baby's mouth, nose or skin would expose the infant to bacteria that could help protect it from developing asthma, atopic disease, and immune disorders, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said.

But the research doesn't yet outweigh the potential risks, Zahn said.

"Breastfeeding for the first six months is the best way to overcome the lack of exposure to maternal vaginal flora at birth," he added.

Also on HuffPost Canada:

Odisha Twins Joined At The Head Separated After Marathon Surgery In AIIMS

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REPRESENTATIVE IMAGE: Doctors during surgery on patient in hospital.

Odisha's craniopagus twins — joined at the head — were on Wednesday separated after a successful marathon surgery that lasted around 11 hours at the AIIMS in Delhi, Odisha Health Minister Pratap Jena said.

"Their health is stable, but they will be kept under observation for 72 hours. Plastic surgeons are on their job after they were separated surgically," Jena said in Odisha capital Bhubaneswar, adding that the surgery began at 9 a.m. and lasted around 11 hours.

A team of 30 doctors from various departments, including neurosurgery, neuro-anesthesia and pediatrics, were on the medical team that undertook the second phase of the surgery on twins Jaga and Kalia, who are around two and a half years old.

The second phase surgery was done before scheduled time as Jaga's health deteriorated.

The Minister said the plastic surgery procedure is expected to continue till 10 a.m. on Thursday.

A senior doctor from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), who is part of the medical team treating the twins, earlier told IANS: "The twins were taken to the operation theatre at 6 a.m. today. The surgery began at 9 a.m. and is expected to last for over 22 hours."

The conjoined twins were taken to AIIMS on July 14 from Milipada village in Kandhamal district of Odisha.

The first phase of the surgery was done on August 28, which included experts from Japan as well. As part of the first phase, a new bypass technique was used for the first time on the twins.

Ahead of the surgery, the twins had to undergo numerous tests. While conjoined twins are known to occur in about every 2,00,000 births, craniopagus twins are rarer, accounting for about only two per cent.

The Odisha government has sanctioned Rs 1 crore for the surgery at AIIMS.

Earlier, the twins had undergone medical check up at at SCB Medical College and Hospital in Cuttack.

A.K. Mahapatra, chief of neurosciences centre, earlier said the twins suffer from a condition that afflicts one in 30 lakh children, of which 50 per cent die either at birth or within 24 hours.

Surgery is feasible only on 25 per cent of the survivors while the rest continue to live with the condition.

The Morning Wrap: India's Political Comedy; What Can You Do To Help Rohingyas

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The Morning Wrap is HuffPost India's selection of interesting news and opinion from the day's newspapers. Subscribe here to receive it in your inbox each weekday morning.

Essential HuffPost

In yet another instance of fear dictating art, comedian Shyam Rangeela's mimicry of Prime Minister Narendra Modi was allegedly dropped by Star Plus as the channel felt it might incite protests across the country.

The impulse behind the Facebook campaign to name sex offenders on social media, instead of following due process, is understandable but it does a disservice to the feminist cause, here and elsewhere, argues Somak Ghoshal.

Hundreds of thousands of desperate Rohingyas have fled their homes in Myanmar to escape what the United Nations describes as a "textbook example" of ethnic cleansing. Here's how you can help them.

Main News

The battle lines over GST became sharper with PM Narendra Modi putting his full weight behind the tax reform, saying it would benefit consumers, the poor and the middle class, while Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi kept up his attack on what he called a "badly conceived" measure.

The Agra police arrested two men and apprehended three minor boys for allegedly being involved in the attack on a Swiss couple in Fatehpur Sikri on 22 October. External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj sought a report on the incident.

Abdul Kareem Telgi, the kingpin of the Rs 32,000-crore stamp paper scam with connections within the government security press, has died. The Hindu delves into his past to bring out a portrait of the man he was.

Off The Front Page

Odisha's craniopagus twins — joined at the head — were on Wednesday separated after a successful marathon surgery that lasted around 11 hours at the AIIMS in New Delhi, Odisha Health Minister Pratap Jena said.

US President Donald J Trump ordered agencies that proposed withholding material related to the assassination of John F Kennedy to report to the archivist by 12 March 2018, on which specific information meets the standard for continued secrecy.

A shop owner and a wholesale goods supplier were detained after balloons with 'I love Pakistan' markings were sold at a provisions store in Kanpur's Govind Nagar area this week.

Opinion

In The Indian Express, Soumiya Ashok writes why watching Mersal is both stressful and amusing in a movie theatre in New Delhi.

The Hindu asks three political experts whether Prime Minister Narendra Modi has lost his magic and the answers -- yes, no, it's complicated -- are full of interesting insights.

An editorial in the Hindustan Times argues that naming and shaming sexual predators, as undertaken by a list on Facebook, isn't the way forward for the good fight, which needs to make the redressal systems more accountable and stronger.

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Former BBC Journalist Allegedly Planning Sting Operation Against Chhattisgarh Minister Arrested: Reports

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A journalist who represented the Editors' Guild of India to "examine the challenges of reporting from Chhattisgarh", was allegedly picked up by cops from his Indirapuram home at 3:30 AM on Friday, questioned by a police team from Raipur and later arrested, according to reports.

Vinod Verma, according to an NDTV report, was allegedly planning a sting operation against the Chhattisgarh government.

Verma has worked as Digital Editor at Amar Ujala and is a former employee of the BBC.

The News18 further reported that the police accused Verma of blackmailing Chhattisgarh PWD minister Rajesh Kumar. Police have allegedly seized over 500 CDs from his home, the report said.

25 Tweets About Married Life That Are Hilariously Accurate

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Marriage is a surprisingly universal experience, and we have the tweets to prove it

Below, 25 spot-on tweets you’ll definitely identify with if you’re a husband or wife. 

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Funny Tweets About Married Life

These Are The Types Of Coworkers People Complain About Most In Therapy

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No one job title or occupation is the same, but the difficult coworkers you run into in any given field tend to be remarkably similar. Their eye roll-inducing behavior (gossiping, micromanaging) may not always be worthy of an HR report but it still slows down workflow and peeves others in the office.

Below, therapists from around the country reveal the types of colleagues their clients complain about most and share the actionable advice they give for dealing with each. 

You all hate the temperature in the office and your laughable company holiday schedule, but the constant complainer seems to take a distinct pleasure in ranting about it. If you need to shut them down so you can get back to work, Los Angeles-based therapist Amanda Stemen suggests offering solutions to problems the person brings up. Then, if the problem is legitimate and solvable, hopefully you’ll never have to hear about it again. 

On the flip side, if it isn’t a legit problem, “the negative co-worker will usually stop complaining when they realize you’re a problem solver and not the type to indulge their behavior or listen,” she told HuffPost. “If the negativity continues, I remind my clients they can always make a quick escape by telling their co-worker, ’Sorry but I need to return to my work.”

When this high-level coworker leads your company’s quarterly meetings, you sit there stunned, thinking,“How, exactly, did this person get their title when others here are so much more deserving?” Issues involving under-performing superiors are among the most common complaints psychologist and executive coach Kate Snowise hears about it her office.

“This is the person in the office who spends most of their time keeping up the appearance of knowing what they are doing,” she said. “It might mean a lot of shuffling paper and smoke and mirrors, but many of them are very good at looking like they’re valuable.” 

Her advice? Be respectful of the person while looking for effective, appropriate ways to work around them. 

“Ask yourself: Is there another leader in the organization who you could use as an informal mentor? Or is there someone else that could help you navigate your frustrations or concerns?” she said. “If that doesn’t feel like an option, you can always sit tight. The incompetent superior typically self-combusts and in my experience, will either end up leaving or getting moved sideways.” 

You can always count on this person to keep you clued in on the extracurricular activities of everyone in the office: your coworkers’ secret one-night stand, the new guy’s alcohol-filled Instagram feed. To curb their endless chatter and gain back your time, Southern California-based psychotherapist Tina Tessina recommends putting this coworker in “an adult time out.” 

“Basically, retreat to polite, businesslike responses but be very low-key about disengaging,” she said. “If the person comes to your desk with gossip, say: ‘I’m sorry, I’ve got a deadline to meet.’ And keep on working. You don’t need to be friends with everyone in your office.” 

It’s 8:45 on a Saturday night and you receive a work email from your manager when the request could clearly wait until Monday. The controlling behavior doesn’t end there ― they’re constantly asking for updates on projects and wanting to be CC’d on everything.

This behavior inevitably creates an atmosphere of distrust in your office and negatively impacts staff morale and productivity, said Alena Gerst, a psychotherapist based in New York City. 

“Often, micromanagers are exhibiting a lack of trust but sometimes, they don’t even know they’re doing it,” Gerst said. 

The best way to handle your office micromanager is to demonstrate, to your fullest ability, your competency. After all, you were hired or promoted for a reason. 

“Don’t let your supervisor walk all over you, but show that you are thorough and trustworthy, and remind them verbally if need be, so they can learn to give you the room you need to do your job,” she said. 

This colleague has a knack for sending tersely worded emails (sometimes, IN ALL CAPS to highlight the urgency of their request) and generally communicating in a way that leaves others feeling annoyed or hurt. 

When dealing wiith a blunt communicator, Snowise recommends addressing them face-to-face whenever possible.

“Email, text and online messaging are apt for misinterpretation, and people often forget to add the niceties they would in a normal conversation,” she said. “So if you know you’re dealing with a blunt communicator, try and keep the majority of your communications face-to-face or over the phone.” 

If you could leave Yelp reviews for people, you’d have this to say of the office slacker: “I would give this person zero stars!” Complaints about lazy colleagues are some of the most common and persistent, said Jose Sandoval, a psychologist in Miami, Florida. Unfortunately, the problem usually can be attributed to the complainer, too.

“Many clients complain but they often engage in self-sabotage by performing tasks that are beyond their job responsibilities to compensate for the slacker,” he told us. “I try to help people improve their assertive communication skills and usually recommend they seek a solution by involving someone at the administrative level, who may be able to delegate specific responsibilities.”

This coworker subtly ― or not so subtly ― takes credit for your work and oftentimes asks for your help and never reciprocates. Tessina’s advice for dealing with this and similarly jerky behavior? Learn to stop being so helpful.

“Unless this person is your boss, say, ‘I’m sorry, I’m too busy to help you right now’ or ‘I’ll do this for you if you do that for me.’ Then wait until they do what you want before you do what they want,” she said. “And if you do work they take credit for, write an email stating the work you did before you give it to them, then you have proof that the ideas came from you. This works even with a boss.” 

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Marriage? That's Up To Destiny, Says Rahul Gandhi

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Congress Vice President Rahul Gandhi arrives for attending the first day of the Parliament Budget Session on January 31, 2017 in New Delhi, India. The budget session is spread over two parts, the first will begin on 31 January and end on 9 February, while the second half of the session will begin on 9 March and will conclude on 12 April. The Union Budget, the first one which will subsume the railway budget, will be presented on 1 February, while the Economic Survey for 2016-17, the annual economic report card, will be presented on 31 January, the first day of the budget session. (Photo by Sonu Mehta/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

If Congress politician Rahul Gandhi had a coin for every time he was asked when he planned to get married, he would not have to worry about change for the rest of his life. Yesterday too, at the PHD Chamber of Commerce, 47-year-old Gandhi was asked this question by none other than boxer Vijender Singh, whose wedding the scion of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty had attended.

"My wife and I want to know when Rahul bhaiyya will get married," the boxer apparently asked Gandhi, according to The Hindu.

After an initial attempt to brush off the question, Gandhi said: "I leave it to destiny. Jab hogi, tab hogi (if it has to happen, it will)."

The conversation soon turned to why politicians do not take part in sports. To which, Gandhi had a surprising revelation about himself. He is a black belt in the Japanese martial art form of Aikido.

In what could be seen as a dig at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Gandhi said: "I play. I do exercise, running, swimming... at least one hour daily. But I don't talk about these things."

Swiss Couple's Agra Nightmare: Boys Forced Woman To Take Selfies, Beat Up Her Male Companion

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Tourists are seen as renovation process continue at Taj Mahal, one of the wonders of the world, in Agra, India on April 29, 2017.

A Swiss couple was so traumatized after being assaulted by a group of boys in Fatehpur Sikri in Uttar Pradesh that they refused to file an FIR, according to an NDTV report. The channel reported that while the woman was forced to take selfies with the minor boys, her male companion was beaten up badly, leading him with a cracked skull.

The shameful incident, one of many against foreign tourists who come to India to experience the country's famous hospitality, four days ago, sent political shockwaves on a day the Chief Minister of the state also visited the Taj Mahal on a cleanliness drive.

IANS reported that Marie Droz was discharged from Delhi's Apollo Hospital yesterday and her companion Quentin Jeremy Clerc's condition was improving, even as five persons, including three minors, were taken into custody for the crime. Yogi Adityanath promised strict action and better security.

The Swiss embassy in New Delhi confirmed the October 22 attack and said it was providing them consular services. The couple was walking alongside a train track in Fatehpur Sikri near Agra when the youths started harassing them.

Senior Superintendent of Police Agra, Amit Pathak, said late on Thursday evening that five persons, including three minors, have been taken into custody for the crime.

Sushma Swaraj sought a report from the Uttar Pradesh government on the assault. Minister of State for Tourism K.J. Alphons expressed deep concern.

"You would kindly appreciate that such incidents negatively impact our image and are detrimental to our efforts in promoting India as a tourism destination," Alphons told the Chief Minister in a letter.

He said a "fast and speedy response in identifying and ensuring speedy action including conviction of the guilty would be reassuring" and would send a "good message of our efforts to prevent recurrence of such incidents".

Police took the Swiss couple to a private hospital in Agra where first aid was given.

Adityanath said touts and anti-social elements who bring a bad name to Agra and the country would be firmly dealt with. Providing security to tourists would be a top priority.

Meanwhile, CPI-M leader Brinda Karat wrote to the Swiss envoy in India expressing "strong protest" over the "failure" of the authorities to provide minimum security to tourists in a wider area that houses the Taj Mahal, India's biggest tourists draw.

"As a citizen of India, I am writing to you to express my deep regret at the shocking and horrifying violence that two young Swiss nationals ... had to face on their trip to Agra and Fatehpur Sikri. It is shameful for us as Indians that two young tourists who had gone to visit the beautiful symbol of love should have to face this horror. Please convey our very best wishes for their speedy recovery," she said.

Condemning the assault on the Swiss tourists, the Congress said the incident "unmasks the ugly face of Anti-Romeo Squads" in the state. (With IANS inputs)

Chrissy Teigen Apologizes For Having Nipples After Accidental Nip Slip

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Totally unbothered. 

A little nip slip never hurt anybody. Just ask Chrissy Teigen.

The supermodel learned the hard way that Snapchatting while getting a spray tan is only for the most skilled of multitaskers when she accidentally flashed her nipple on the app Wednesday.

Teigen was caught unaware, happily going about her day documenting a meal with husband John Legend until responses from concerned fans came flooding in. 

The “Lip Sync Battle” host quickly caught on, however, seemingly addressing the issue with a “whoops” on Twitter.

But apparently her assistant ― hired for these things, of course ― had already intervened, pulling the video down from her Snapchat. Teigen took a screenshot of their text conversation (sounds like she’s planning a bingo night?) to give followers an inside look at her glamorous life.

“What is it like being an assistant in Hollywood, you ask?” she wrote alongside the photo. 

She wasn’t done just yet, though, as she took to Snapchat to jokingly apologize to her followers for exposing herself in a peak Chrissy way. 

“I just want to apologize to everyone I know. I’ve let my friends down. I’ve let my family down,” she said. “I have nipples. It’s not something I’m proud of.”

“I’m sorry you had to see that,” she added later on Snapchat. “I have nipples. I do have nipples. I’m sorry.”

We must protect her at all costs. 

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Chrissy Teigen

BHU Seniors Throw Scalding Tea On Fiji Student For Refusing To Call Them 'Sir'

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Banaras Hindu University (BHU) in Uttar Pradesh has the unenviable fortune of finding its way into the news.

After weeks of turmoil on the campus last month, over the alleged sexual assault of a woman student, The Telegraph reported on Friday of yet another incident of attack on a student at the prestigious institution of higher education.

Munish Krisil Samy, a student from Fiji, was allegedly accosted by a group of seniors and asked to address them as 'Sir'. Although cornered, Samy refused to do so and paid a price for his resistance.

"I told them we are all equal as students and cannot call each other 'Sir'," he told the reporter. "They thrashed me at that time."

But his ordeal didn't end there. The seniors took him to a restaurant on campus where they flung scalding hot tea on his face.

An FIR has been lodged since then and investigations are on to nab the criminals. Under anti-ragging laws, the culprits could be expelled from the institution and imposed heavy penalties on, but clearly, these are not deterrent enough for such atrocities to end.

READ: An Overwhelming Number Of Students In India Don't Complain About Ragging: Report

A study carried out by a committee mandated by the Supreme Court (SC), funded by the University Grants Commission (UGC), revealed the persistence of ragging in many higher education institutions across India.

Based on a sample of over 10,000 students from different parts of the country, the report indicates that an overwhelming number of victims, as high as 84%, did not complain about ragging by their seniors or peers. About 36% believe ragging prepares them for the world, so they don't find anything unnatural about this perverse 'rite of passage'.

BHU's reputation of being in the thick of incidents detrimental to its students' well-being is notorious by now. Earlier this year, the authorities allegedly expelled a woman student from its hostels for showing 'homosexual tendencies'.

When students gathered to protests against sexual assault on women on campus, the police thrashed them and lodged FIRs against 1,000 of them. Amidst the outcry, the incident of a man gangraped on campus last year, which the authorities allegedly had tried to hush up, came up again.

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