Bitter reality of present which has destroyed the relations of Past. Please read and comment if you feel its reality of today. 🙏
https://t.co/UYWDR5BcKP
On 1st May, International Labour Day, O/o the Assistant Labour Commissioner Kupwara hosted an outreach and awareness camp at Townhall Handwara, sharing vital information about labour codes, welfare initiatives, and security measures among stakeholders #Labour#Awareness#Welfare
On the eve of International Women’s Day, the Department of Social Welfare and Employment, under Mission YUVA, conducted a programme at Dak Bungalow, Baramulla, to celebrate women under the theme “Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao – Beti Ko Atmanirbhar Banao.”
@DCBaramulla@diprjk
📞 MISSION YUVA Toll-Free Helpline!
Have queries or grievances regarding Mission YUVA? Call
📲 1800-180-4969
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A dedicated support system for our aspiring entrepreneurs. 💼✨
#MissionYUVA
At the 16th Shramik Warta, Labour Commissioner J&K, Charandeep Singh, interacted directly with applicants and emphasized prompt redressal of their issues — strengthening transparent and accountable governance.
@diprjk@LabourMinistry@OfficeOfLGJandK@CM_JnK@CeeDeeSingh
After two deeply enriching years as DC, I bid farewell to Baramulla with immense gratitude. The warmth of its people, dedication of our officers and staff, and the support of Police, Army & CAPFs made this journey meaningful. Baramulla will always remain special.
Today under IEC Campaign on Labour Codes, held programme with private hospitals, nursing homes, Medical representatives unions of District Baramulla at Guru Hospital Sopore
@LabourCommrJK@DCBaramulla@Rahil__Amin@diprjk
Grievance under payment of wages act was resolved amicably with efforts of ALC and labour officer. Amount ₹50741 got paid to the applicant on spot. The complaint was resolved in weekly sharmik warta chaired by worthy @LabourCommrJK.
@diprjk@DCBaramulla@LabourMinistry
@Shahzad_2702 Sir, Your vision, dedication, and tireless efforts have been the driving force behind the success of Mission Yuva.
What we see today on the ground is a true reflection of your leadership and commitment. Wishing you greater success and new milestones in your next assignment.
Grateful to @ceo_UTJK , for recognising the work done by my @SudanAyushi and me as District Election Officers during the General and Assembly Elections, on National Voters’ Day 2026 #NVD2026
🇮🇳 Mission YUVA at Republic Day 2026 🇮🇳
Tomorrow, Mission YUVA showcases its tableau at the Republic Day celebrations at MA Stadium Jammu, symbolising the spirit of entrepreneurship, self-reliance and youth-led development in Jammu & Kashmir.
#RepublicDay2026#AtmanirbharBharat
Today on 22/01/2026, Labour Deptt. Kupwara successfully conducted an lEC campaign at Legends College of Nursing & Paramedical Sciences, Kargam Handwara, engaging private hospitals, management, HR & staff on new Labour Codes & key welfare schemes (PF, ESIC, Gratuity etc).
The last few days have been deeply disturbing.
News from different districts of Jammu & Kashmir about young students taking their own lives after the Class 10 results should shake our collective conscience. One child lost is one too many. No examination result can ever justify such a loss.
At the same time, social media is flooded every year with public expressions of disappointment , sometimes even shame, when children score “only” 85% or 90%. This culture of comparison, flaunting, and silent humiliation has become an annual ritual. It is unhealthy, illogical, and dangerous.
As per NCRB data, India reports nearly fourteen thousand student suicides every year. Many are linked to academic stress, exam failure, or fear of disappointing family and society.
Class X (or XII) board marks do not determine life outcomes. They never have.
Globally, the most advanced education systems do not obsess over marks. Many follow pass–fail or broad distinction systems, focusing on conceptual understanding, curiosity, creativity, and skills. During my time at Oxford, I saw firsthand how learning is valued over scoring , how education is meant to expand minds, not trap children in rank lists.
In real life, society needs scientists, doctors, engineers, entrepreneurs, artists, policy professionals, judges, and innovators — not lifelong “Class 10 distinction holders”.
For perspective: I scored 55% in Class X. Years later, I secured Rank 51 in the UPSC Civil Services Examination. Life has turned out just fine. Marks did not define the journey but learning, resilience, and purpose did.
To parents, relatives, neighbours, and well-wishers:
Please show restraint.
Do not flaunt marks publicly.
Do not compare children.
Do not reduce a child’s worth to a percentage.
To our students:
One exam does not define you.
One result does not limit your future.
Your life matters far more than any marksheet.
Let us be kinder. Let us be wiser.
Let our children learn, grow, fail, recover, and discover their own paths , without fear.
A society is judged not by its toppers, but by how safely it holds its children.