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Renowned City Neurologist Dr JS Chopra Gets Lifetime Achievement Award

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The Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGI, for short) Chandigarh has thrown up several luminaries in the field of medicine who have held aloft the city’s banner at world forums. Renowned Indian neurologist and Padma Bhushan awardee Prof. Jagjit Singh Chopra has raised it further. He has been conferred with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the World Federation of Neurology (WFN) at its recently concluded XXIII World Congress at Kyoto, Japan. Dr Dheeraj Khurana, professor in the Department of Neurology at the PGI, set up by Dr Chopra, received the award on his behalf. The award will officially be handed over to Dr Chopra on Sunday evening at a function organised by the PGI Neurological Society on the occasion of World Stroke Day at The Taj.

Announcing this at a media interaction in the presence of the ailing 82-year-old doctor himself on Saturday, former PGI head of department of Neurology Dr VK Kak and Dr Vivek Lal, professor and head of the department, said the award was a fitting tribute to the eminent doctor’s immense contribution to neurology. They said, for decades Dr Chopra had inspired generations of young and upcoming neurologists. Having suffered a stroke last year he had lost his speech, but made a remarkable recovery with his expertise, knowledge and perseverance, they added.

PHOTOS BY: LIFE IN CHANDIGARH

After doing his post graduation and Ph.D. from UK, and working in various hospitals there, Dr Chopra joined the PGI as assistant professor and established the Department of Neurology in November 1968. He was gradually elevated to the post of professor and head of the department, which he held till his retirement in June 1995. Dr. Chopra remained Founder Director-Principal of Govt. Medical College and Hospital, Chandigarh with additional responsibility of Secretary, Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh Administration, on deputation from PGI from 1991 to 1995. Planned on modular basis, the college is now ranked 9th among the best medical colleges in the country.

Dr. Chopra trained many super specialists in neurology, most of whom are heading departments of Neurology at various establishments in India and abroad. He also trained many specialists in neurology for the armed forces. After his retirement he is Professor Emeritus at PGI and at the National Academy of Medical Sciences, New Delhi. He has conducted cutting edge research in diseases of muscles, peripheral nerves, stroke and infections of the nervous system in UK and India.


 

He was founder president of Indian Academy of Neurology and past president of Neurological Society of India. He was the first Indian neurologist to be selected as the Secretary General of XIV World Congress of Neurology held in 1989 at New Delhi.

Dr Chopra was awarded the Padma Bhushan by the President of India in 2008. He is also recipient of dozens of other prestigious national and international awards.

Global Experts To Adopt New Approach To Counter Chronic Lifestyle Diseases

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Get ready for medical history to be created right here in Chandigarh. The first ever World NCD Congress, to be jointly hosted by the World NCD Foundation, a recently launched professional association working in the field of non communicable diseases (NCDs), and the Post Graduate Institute for Medical Education and Research (PGI, for short) from November 4 to 6, 2017, is expected to deliberate on, and adopt a declaration, chalking out a new multi disciplinary and integrated approach towards tackling the chronic lifestyle diseases. These diseases, including diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, chronic lung and kidney diseases, cancer, stroke, and those related to mental health, are taking on epidemic like proportions and have outpaced the communicable diseases as the biggest killers of mankind.

The three-day congress will witness participation from renowned doctors and heads of research institutions, representing a multiplicity of medical disciplines associated with these lifestyle diseases, from 100 countries. Ministers, parliamentarians and other policymakers, exponents of alternative forms of medicine, yoga, spiritualism and artists will also participate in the deliberations.

PHOTOS BY: LIFE IN CHANDIGARH

Sharing details of the congress, PGI Director Prof. Jagat Ram, Dr. JS Thakur, Organising Chairperson, Dr. Dheeraj Khurana, Chairperson, Media and Outdoor Committee, and senior faculty members from the 10 departments of the PGI involved in organising the congress said the scientific aspects of yoga, spirituality and art which aid in healing of various lifestyle diseases will find special focus during the congress in the form of separate sessions.

Since the congress is focussing on finding solutions to the diseases afflicting large sections of the population, a number of people centric activities have been planned which will be interspersed with the medical and scientific sessions. Some of the activities planned are a walkathon, a marathon, a mass yoga session and an ‘arogya’ mela. To spread awareness about the chronic lifestyle diseases a three-day targeted art exhibition titled “Only I Can Change My Life” was held in the Zakir Hall of PGI from October 25 to 27. The exhibition showcased the works of 43 accomplished artists.

The Chandigarh Administration and Chandigarh Region Innovation and Knowledge Cluster (CRIKC) Institutions are co-hosts of the congress which has the theme “Preventing Non Communicable Diseases: Realizing Sustainable Development Goals”.

Dr Thakur informed that global organisations connected with health will be represented at the congress which is expecting about 1200 delegates, including heads of all 13 top research agencies involved in the field of NCDs which form the Global Alliance for Chronic Diseases (GACD).

Dr Meenu Singh told media persons that integration of modern medicine with alternative forms of medicine would be an important topic of discussion during the congress. The seriousness with which the AYUSH Ministry was participating in the congress can be judged from the fact that the Minister of AYUSH in the Government of India would be personally participating in the deliberations. The Union ministers of state for health and family welfare will also be among the participants along with a host of senior officials from the ministry and research institutions overseen by it.   

Lifeinchandigarh.com wishes the First World NCD Conference all success in achieving its goals for a healthier world !!

A Young Poetic Bud Ready To Bloom In Our Midst

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Impressionist young minds are maturing faster than before, and a few among them are deftly penning their impressions about what is happening around them in a way that is surprising even the accomplished. One such teenage girl, Twesha Dikshit, has burst on the tricity scene with a collection of English poems called “Idiosyncrasy”, which, at the launch ceremony at Hotel Mountview on Saturday, was acknowledged by an accomplished writer and a well known poet as a wonderful outcome of a remarkably creative and mature mind.

In a forward written for the book, Altaf Tyrewala, author of critically acclaimed books ‘No God in Sight’ and ‘Ministry of Hurt Sentiments’ and editor of crime fiction collection ‘Mumbai Noir’ says, "Twesha Dikshit’s intensely alive poems are like sprints through the mindscape of a young person – there are muddy roads, for sure, and blind turns, but there are also sudden openings onto vivid and fascinating vistas. This is a beautiful collection with a big beating heart, and the world is richer for its creation."

PHOTOS BY: LIFE IN CHANDIGARH

Interacting with media persons before the formal launch, Sahitya Akademi award winning novelist and playwright Kiran Nagarkar said, having read each of Twesha’s poems in her collection, he thought some of the poems were “quite exceptional”, especially coming from a 17-year-old. He described Twesha as a “monumental example” of a poet starting at such an early age. Wishing her a successful journey ahead as a poetess, he said transparency of language with a message so deep was the hallmark of good poetry, so well epitomed in S.T. Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”.

Noted poet and vice chairman of the Chandigarh Sahitya Academy, Madhav Kaushik, said, Twesha’s poetry came straight from the heart. “Her spontaneity and her command over the language are overwhelming for a youngster her age. Her words of rebellion against the societal ills, are also not loud, which is a welcome departure from the modern trend.”

The book published by Adab Foundation, has some captivating photographs taken by Twesha’s father Mitul Dikshit, an avid photographer and well known educationist of the tricity, from his collection captured during his adventurous sojourns of Inca Ruins and Amazon Rain Forests.

Twesha says, since childhood she has been an avid reader and started penning her thoughts at a very tender age when she was in boarding school at Welham Girls’ School, Dehradun. Initially she penned down stories, but later switched to writing poems as she grew up. “When I returned from boarding school after completing by tenth, I got easy access to the internet and learnt the nuances of poetry online. I also regularly wrote on my blog (www.magicofwordsweb.wordpress.com). When I felt I had a good collection of poems in my bag, I decided to get this compilation published.”

Describing herself as a shy person, who is not comfortable sharing her thoughts with anyone in person, Twesha, who is currently pursuing her high school from Strawberry Fields High School, Chandigarh, shares “This is one of the reasons why I used to pen my thoughts on various issues which engaged my attention. At this age, I can’t say I have had too many experiences of life. So my collection of poems is based on my limited exposure. Though I do not have my next project in mind yet, I hope to improve by poetic skills with every new experience which comes my way.”

Lifeinchandigarh.com hopes for many more from you, Twesha!!

Big Victory A Booster Dose For Cong Govt

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Despite leading an impressive victory in the assembly elections in Punjab, which brought the Congress back to power after ten long years, Capt. Amarinder Singh presided over the party’s government in the state with some unease, largely because the precarious financial condition of the state did not allow satisfactory implementation of poll promises made by the party, especially the waiver of farm loans of the distressed farmers. Which is why the party put in its everything to win the first by-election in the state within six months of the government taking charge as if its life depended on it.

The record-breaking win of its candidate Sunil Jakhar in the border lok sabha constituency Gurdaspur comes as a much needed booster shot for the Capt. Amarinder Singh government to pursue its agenda more freely and a dampener for the determined campaigns by the ousted Shiromani Akali Dal-Bharatiya Janata Party combine and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) to corner the government on every conceivable issue from Day One.

PHOTOS BY: LIFE IN CHANDIGARH

The record margin of victory, 1.93 lakh-plus, surpassing the previous highest in 1980, when Sukhbans Kaur Bhinder (Congress) had won by 1.51 lakh votes, and the fact that the party had wrested the seat from the BJP, whose candidate, Bollywood star-turned-politician Vinod Khanna, had won the last election in 2014 defeating the Congress candidate Pratap Singh Bajwa was a margin of 1.36 lakh, becomes as a big boost for the Congress central party leadership ahead of the assembly election in Himachal Pradesh and Gujarat. It has also placed Capt. Amarinder Singh in the centre stage of the party’s quest for reviving its electoral fortunes in the country.

 The Congress leadership in the state has attributed the impressive victory in the by-election, which was caused by the death of Vinod Khanna, to choice of the best candidate (Sunil Jakhar, son of late Congress leader, former Lok Sabha speaker and Union minister Balram Singh Jakhar, is state Congress president, three time former MLA from Abohar, former leader of the Opposition, and commands a clean image as a politician), complete unity in the party, 24×7 campaigning  in the constituency by Congress MLAs, workers and ministers and disillusionment of the people with both the SAD-BJP combine and the AAP.

The choice of candidate by the BJP was also questionable. Businessman Swarna Salaria remained in the thick of controversy because of his role in putting the future of medical students in jeopardy in the Chintpurni Medical College at Pathankot run by him. An old case of rape against him also haunted him during the course of the election campaign. The death knell was perhaps the arrest of his campaign in-charge from partner SAD, Sucha Singh Langah, who was arrested after a woman police constable slapped a case of rape against him. The BJP was also guilty of not capitalising on the legacy of four-time MP from the constituency, Vinod Khanna.

Salaria lost from all nine assembly segments in the lok sabha constituency. The AAP candidate Maj. Gen (retd) Suresh Khajuria was reduced to an ‘also rans’,  and puts a big question mark on the future prospects of the party, which won 20 seats in the assembly elections in the state, though none from the Majha region of the state in which the Gurdaspur lok sabha constituency falls.

The outcome of the by-election once again brings to the fore the prospect of a breakup of the SAD-BJP alliance, the demand for which was strongly orchestrated within the BJP rank and file ahead of the 2017 assembly elections, but which was overruled  by the central party.

The standoff within the party had lead to the party’s most prominent Sikh face in the state, Navjot Singh Sidhu leaving the party and joining the Congress. Sidhu, who won the assembly elections from Amritsar East assembly constituency on the Congress ticket, was made cabinet minister in the Capt. Amarinder Singh government and has since lead a virulent campaign against the SAD, especially its president and former deputy chief minister Sukhbir Singh Badal. Sidhu also to a large extent spearheaded Sunil Jakhar’s campaign from the Gurdaspur lok sabha constituency.

The so-called anger among the farmers in the state, which was orchestrated allegedly by the SAD in the form of a farmers’ agitation ahead of the polls, apparently failed to impact the outcome of the by-election. AAP leader Sukhpal Singh Khaira’s much hyped corruption crusade against Rana Gurjit Singh, Power and Irrigation minister in the Capt. Amarinder Singh government, also failed to cut much ice with the electorate.

The stage is now set for the much delayed urban local body elections in the state, which are expected to be fast tracked by the Capt Amarinder Singh government buoyed by the runaway victory in the Gurdaspur by-election victory.

It Pours Love, Affection & Respect At Cremation Ground

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The love, affection and respect for the great man poured in large measure as the mortal remains of one of the front runners of joint replacement surgery in the region, Dr Jaswant Rai, were laid to rest at the cremation ground in Sector 25 on Tuesday. Besides near and dear ones, the entire medical fraternity, cutting across specialities, lawyers and Dr Rai’s admirers and patients from a cross-section of society were in attendance to pay their last respects to the humble soul.

As Dr Rai’s lawyer son Aseem Rai performed the last rights, people standing in groups were heard speaking highly of the man who was steadfastly ethical in his medical practise, a passionate teacher and a man of conviction. Wreaths were laid on his mortal remains, including one on behalf of PGI by its Director Prof Jagat Ram and Head of Orthopaedics Department Prof MS Dhillon. Large teams of doctors and administrators were also present from the two private hospitals the orthopaedic and joint replacement departments of which he presided – Fortis Hospital Mohali and Alchemist Hospital Panchkula. Present and past IMA presidents were also seen among the mourners.

PHOTOS BY: LIFE IN CHANDIGARH

Earlier in the day, a condolence meeting was held in the PGI under the chairmanship of Prof. Jagat Ram to pay homage to the departed soul. Senior professors, former directors, HODs, PGI faculty members, the administrative staff and resident doctors joined in to mourn the death of the eminent surgeon of PGI.

Prof MS Dhillon remembered Prof Rai as a great mentor and teacher “who played a tremendous role in strengthening the discipline of orthopaedic surgery in the department.

An Ethical Ortho & Joint Replacement Surgeon Passes Away

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Most orthopaedic surgeons, especially new age joint replacement surgeons, would look to rip you off come the slightest complaint of pain in the knees. But he was one among that class of doctors who would never prematurely ring the alarm bells and nurse most patients back to normal with the time tested simple exercises done with the help of an old bicycle rubber tube.

That was Dr Jaswant Rai for you, one of the most respected orthopaedic and joint replacement surgeons of the region, who famously served in the orthopaedic departments of the PGI, Fortis Hospital Mohali and Alchemist Hospital Panchkula in senior positions and as head of the department. He died on Sunday night at age 74. His cremation will be held on Tuesday at Sector 25 crematorium at 4 p.m.

I do remember, in my late 40s, I developed this problem in my right knee, which used to start aching after a few minutes of drive and get locked. “We have to rule out arthritis,” said an ortho in one of the hospitals in Sector 34 after looking at my x-ray. “Get an MRI done,” he advised, and I promptly obliged. The MRI did not report anything adverse, so the doc prescribed a few medicines and daily light exercises. My painful condition did not improve even after a longish adherence. So I went to another ortho, this time in Sector 44. Listening to my ‘Ram kahani’, and going through my records, he advised me to undergo regular diathermy sessions for a few weeks. My condition deteriorated further and even bending my knee became an issue.

Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

That’s when somebody suggested that I visit Dr Jaswant Rai, who was then director orthopaedics and joint replacement at Alchemist Hospital Panchkula. A quick examination and a few questions later, he was at his table writing a prescription. “It’s nothing, you’ll be all right soon. Just get an old bicycle rubber tube and do these exercises twice a day.” Case dismissed, no further talk. That’s how he was, misconstrued as being rude by some of his patients. The problem was gone and forgotten within weeks, as if nothing had happened.

I took a real liking for the professionally ethical doctor and started recommending him to friends. My last visit to him was in March 2017 at the Fortis clinics in Sector 11. This time it was my left knee. He looked quite weak in the legs, and was moving around by taking support of the furniture in his cabin. I did ask if he was all right, and he nodded. “Dasso ki problem hai.” I explained and he completed the same routine as last time and said, “Nothing to worry. You’ll be all right.” Without prescribing any medicines he asked me to follow the same tube exercises. Though this time the problem lingered on for a little longer, he insisted on my not taking pain killers. Instead he prescribed a few tablets to improve the lubrication in my knee joint. And there I was up and about within days, without having to undergo expensive tests and gulping down pain killers.

Informing about his death, a PGI press release said Prof. Jaswant Rai was born on 18.3.1943. He did his MBBS from Government Medical College, Amritsar in 1969 and MS Orthopaedics from PGI. He worked as a surgeon in PGI since 1974 and remained head of one of the units for a long time before he took voluntary retirement in October 2004. He joined as Director Orthopaedics at Fortis Hospital, Mohali and later moved as such to Alchemist Hospital, Panchkula. He last ran an OPD at the Fortis clinics in Chandigarh.

The PGI release described him as a leading joint replacement surgeon of the region since 1981. He was also an excellent teacher and a favourite with postgraduate students. His morning classes are the best memories for every postgraduate student of Orthopaedics Department.

Prof Jaswant Rai taught sports medicine and sports physiology as Honorary Consultant at Panjab University Chandigarh for 20 long years from 1983 to 2003. He delivered lectures, and participated in live demonstrations, during National and International conferences on joint replacement.

Lifeinchandigarh.com salutes the towering man

Politico Sidhu On Possibility Of Being Caught In A Chakravyuh™

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You may be wanting to play with a straight bat, your intent and resolve may be honest, but the way politics is played in the country, and in Punjab (there is very little differentiating one party from another), a distant possibility is that you might get sucked into a political ‘chakravyuh’ from where there is little or no possibility of escape.
This observation was put to maverick cricketer-commentator-turned-politician and current local bodies and tourism minister of Punjab, Navjot Singh Sidhu, at a meet-the-press programme at Chandigarh Pres Club on Thursday. ‘Sixer Sidhu’, a magician of wordplay, had the answer ready “The political malaise confronting the country today can only be fought from within. So good people have to enter politics and have the conviction to stay on against all odds. There have been great people who have run away from politics. We cannot shirk our responsibility towards our country,” he said.
Photo By: Life In Chandigarh
“For me politics is a mission. It’s a means of changing the lives of people for the good, it can also change the fortunes of a state. Unfortunately, from the heights of selfless politics from the likes of Mahatma Gandhi, Lal Bahadur Shastri, Shyama Prasad Mukherjee, when a Prime Minister had to take a loan to buy a car which he could not repay during his lifetime and his widow did from her pension, there is now a crisis of character and moral values are at their lowest ebb, with protectors of the people becoming their perpetrators. Ninety percent of the people in politics have adopted it as a profession, as a business.
“We have to win back that trust. We have to bring good people in. My father, Late Bhagwant Singh, who idolised Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, used to tell me ‘when in doubt, walk straight, walk the path of truth’.  I was only seven years old then, the words stuck in my mind. Today I am zealously following that path. I may have my faults, as all others do, but my ‘neeyat’ (intentions) are honest. I’ll not dither in my tracks,” he asserted.
Come, Politics Beckons You !! 

Smiles Just Stuck On Specially Abled Children’s Faces

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It’s seldom that children with special abilities, and those from the marginalised communities, get to enjoy a fair specially designed for them, and happily learn from it too. One such opportunity was provided to them by a well known boys’ school of the city on Friday. “Just Fair”, as it was aptly called, allowed the dozens of children drawn from the colonies, rehabilitation institutes and NGOs, with which St John’s regularly conducts its community activities, to forget themselves for those three hours and soak themselves in fun, frolic, creative activities, and a variety of lip-smacking food items laid out for them absolutely free of cost.

The fair organised in all Christian Brother schools across the country, was part of the mission of the school’s founder, Blessed Brother Edmund Rice. The aim being to empathise with children from the margins, who are largely deprived of the happiness and opportunities they deserve. The fair succeeded in its primary motive as the smiles just did not fade from the faces of the mentally, visually and audio impaired children during the entire course of the fair.

PHOTOS BY: LIFE IN CHANDIGARH

The school buses were at hand to ferry children from Bapu Dham colony, Government Rehabilitation Institute for Intellectual Disabilities (GRIID), Sector 31, the School for the Blind, and children supported by NGOs like Hamari Kaksha,  Nanhi Jaan, Sadhana and Donbosco. Students of government schools in sector 26 and 8 were also among the gleeful invitees.

Every child was given an identity card and a set of coupons to participate in specially designed games and creative activities and to eat to their heart’s fill.  The children and staff members enjoyed playing a wide variety of value-based games like Memory Game, Building Blocks, Roll the Dice, Lucky Dip etc.

Under the overall motivation of school principal Kavita C. Das, the students and teachers of St. John’s truly lived their belief – "It is more blessed to give than receive."

Transformation From A Strokeless Wonder™ To A Palm-Grove Hitter™

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The swashbuckling cricketer-turned-politician Navjot Singh Sidhu credits the Media for the transformation in his cricketing fortunes, as well as making people accountable for their actions, and would like to see a stringent law being framed to effectively protect its freedom.

Remembering the days when he found himself being omitted from the national team after a poor showing on his debut in international cricket in 1983, Sidhu told a meet-the-press programme at the Chandigarh Press Club on Thursday that a banner headline in a national daily changed his very approach to the game. “The headline ‘Sidhu : A Strokeless Wonder’ carried on top of a column by a noted cricket writer of that time Rajan Bala in the Indian Express ripped me, and stripped me of my pride.”

 

PHOTOS BY: LIFE IN CHANDIGARH

His father, Sardar Bhagwant Singh, then advocate general of Punjab, who meant everything to Navjot, was apparently deeply disturbed after reading the column. “It was then that I took a secret pledge to make a comeback to the national squad. I started to take my cricket career more seriously. It took me a good four years to retu to the national team, during which period I also lost my father. That was shattering, as I could not fulfil my father’s dream, but I was goaded by all those around me to keep making efforts towards living his dreams.

“And there I was playing for my country in the Reliance World Cup 1987 co-hosted by India and Pakistan and scoring four fifties in a row which included 36 sixes (he had scores of 73, 75, 51, 55 against Australia, New Zealand, Australia again and Zimbabwe, respectively). After the world cup, on way to a tournament in Sharjah, Ravi Shastri showed me a headline to a column by the same writer (Rajan Bala) carried in Khaleej Times which this time read ‘Sidhu: From Strokeless Wonder To A Palm-Grove Hitter’. I felt great reading that. A transformation had really taken place.”

Sidhu recalled that when he made the secret pledge to himself, he was up 4.30 in the morning every day and was in the field with his helpers, “watering and rolling the pitch myself before practice. From the pocket money my father used to give me, I carried chocolates for the bowlers who were to bowl at me. I used to make it a point to hit 125 sixes every day. My hands used to bleed and I wore batting gloves with an extra lining of cotton to soak in the blood. Within 3-4 months my hands were as hard as steel.

“It took me three-and-a-half years to get a genuine break when Kapil Bhaaji called up one day to offer an opportunity to me to play for Sahara India in the then prestigious Sheesh Mahal Trophy. I grabbed the opportunity with both hands. In each of the seven innings I played against SBI and others, I hit a minimum of 10 sixes, which was enough for me to be included among the 25 probables for the Indian team for the Reliance World Cup. During the preparatory camp, some 200-300 cricket balls would have been lost because of my big hitting.”

A Real Inspiration For Aspiring Cricket Stars !!

First Woman SSP Assures Greater Accountability From Her Force

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As the Chandigarh Police claim to have busted a gang of vehicle thieves with the arrest of two 19-year-olds and a juvenile and recovery of 15 two-wheelers from them, the first woman Senior Superintendent of Police of UT Chandigarh Nilambari Jagadale appears to be putting in place a system of greater accountability towards the general public and seeking their closer cooperation in making the city, its colonies and the villages falling within the jurisdiction of the Union territory safer.

Talking to lifeinchandigarh.com after a press briefing to announce the arrests and the recovery, Nilambari said it is still early days (she joined the force six weeks ago on deputation from Punjab), but she has taken a few steps already to win the confidence of the people, whose safety, security and wellbeing is her business. “The foremost of my priorities is to make the force more accountable to the people we serve. For this the complaint redressal system is being monitored on a daily basis so that there is no pendency, especially of complaints of a serious nature. I am also keeping a close eye on the complaints being submitted in the public window at the police headquarters in Sector 9.

Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

“A string of anti-snatching measures have also been operationalised, including a practice of shifting nakas (anytime, anywhere), especially in the identified most prone areas. With this we have removed the predictability factor,” she said.

The SSP informed that the entire public grievances system was being given a new thrust, with more and regular interactions with all sections of the people at all levels. The market committees and resident welfare associations will be central to all such activities aimed at creating closer bonding between the public and the police. These will not remain ceremonial in nature, she assured.

She said the police force will organize more camps like the dental camp organized for senior citizens recently and these will touch the daily lives of the weaker sections of society in a major way.

During the festive season, though security is the topmost priority, but officers at all levels have been instructed to attend to even other festival-related public grievances like noise pollution. “DSP and SHO level officers have been asked to personally intervene in such complaints and counsel the people against whom such complaints are addressed,” she shared.

lifeinchandigarh.com sincerely hopes that the police are able to improve their image in the eyes of the general public and we are to take pride in them.