Deccan Chronicle

MINISTER GETS INTO A STICKY SITUATION WITH SKIRT QUIP

ASARAM TO BE BROUGHT TO AIIMS FOR CHECK-UP

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI, AUG. 29

Union culture minister Mahesh Sharma on Monday found himself in the middle of a controvers­y for his remarks that foreigners travelling to India should avoid wearing skirts, forcing him to issue a clarificat­ion.

Mr Sharma said his comments were “advisory in nature”.

Talking to reporters on Sunday in Agra, he had said, “For their own safety, women foreign tourists should not wear short dresses and skirts... Indian culture is different from the western (culture).”

The Supreme Court on Monday posted for hearing on September 2 the plea of animal activists alleging that Kerala had decided to cull the stray dogs following incidents of dog bites in the State.

A bench of Justices Dipak Misra and S. Nagppan advanced the hearing from September 14 to Friday as it was apprehende­d that several stray dogs will be killed in the meanwhile.

Apex court lawyer Prashant Bhushan had also written a letter to the Kerala Chief Minister that stray dogs should not be killed as such action will be in violation of the earlier orders of this court.

In April this year the apex court had set up a panel headed by retired HC judge, S.S. Jagan, to go into stray dog bite incidents in Kerala and the panel in its report had said that more than one lakh people in the State have been bitten by dogs in 2015-16.

It expressed concern that frequent stray dog attacks on children in the state have created a dangerous situation.

The report said, “India order while hearing Asaram’s bail plea on medical grounds.

Earlier a bench had ordered medical check up at AIIMS but during the resumed hearing before a Bench of Justice A.K. Sikri, the court was informed that the AIIMS had sent a report that the godman be brought to Delhi as it was not possible for all the doctors in the board to visit Jodhpur jail. is a nation with substantia­l fatal rabies cases, mainly due to stray dog bites. Kerala is estimated to have stray dog population of 2.5 lakhs, which feed lavishly on the wastes and garbages dumps across cities and towns.”

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