SC for prompt and effective action to rescue miners

SC का प्रशंसनीय कदम
The Supreme Court: ‘Every minute counts’ for those trapped in the mine for almost three weeks

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NEW DELHI/SHILLONG: The Supreme Court on Thursday expressed strong dissatisfaction over the rescue efforts to trace 15 people trapped in a mine in Meghalaya for 22 days, telling the state government to bring them out dead or alive.

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प्रश्न,  अपने आप से और सबों से –

क्या हम सब क्रूर हों गए हैं?

मानवता से ऊपर उठ गए हैं?

या हम सबों का जीवन इतना कठिन हो गया है कि जीने की कोशिश में अपने और अपनो तक सीमित हो गए हैं.

किसी की तो नींद खुली old & latest news, 13 Feared Dead In Flooded “Rat Hole” Mine In Meghalaya

Latest  News-   SC raps Meghalaya government over miners’ tragedy  –New Delhi (India), Jan 3 (ANI): The Supreme Court on Thursday asked Meghalaya government what steps have been taken so far to rescue 15 miners, trapped in a coal mine in East Jaintia Hills since December 13 last year.

कहते हैं, जब जागो , तब सवेरा !!!

पर क्या  अब वे खान मज़दूर सवेरा देख पायेंगे?

 

Latest News — SC raps Meghalaya government over miners’ tragedyMeghalaya rescue operations: Odisha firefighters pump out water to rescue 15 trapped inside coal mine

Old NEWS _ By The Time You Read This, We Could All be Dead

East Jaintia Hills (Meghalaya):  13 Feared Dead In Flooded “Rat Hole” Mine In Meghalaya . Unsafe rat-hole coal mining have been taking place illegally despite a National Green Tribunal ban in place in Meghalaya since 2014.

हमारे यहाँ जान की कीमत इतनी कम क्यों है?

आज के मैटेरियलिस्टिक जीवन …

भौतिकवाद ने सुन्न….

संवेदनाशून्य कर दिया है?

या हम सब सो रहे हैं?

या हम सब भी जिंदगी के ऐसी हीं किसी जद्दो ज़हद में फंसें हैं?

 

NEWS _ By The Time You Read This, We Could All be Dead

East Jaintia Hills (Meghalaya):

13 Feared Dead In Flooded “Rat Hole” Mine In Meghalaya
Unsafe rat-hole coal mining have been taking place illegally despite a National Green Tribunal ban in place in Meghalaya since 2014.

Thirteen days after the incident, all that is left inside the labourers’ tents — just a few metres from where they worked and are feared to have died — are a few broken egg shells, dirty old slippers, empty plastic bottles and a layer of black coal on the soil. Tired, the grandfather stopped waiting and returned to his village.

……The ‘sardar’ didn’t tell me that my son won’t come back,” Ali says, his voice breaking. The three members of his family were told they would get paid at the end of every week. But when they entered the mine on the sixth day, they did not come back.