Mira Road, Mumbai - A minor hindu girl's life was shattered by Saud Khan, 22
> Maharashtra Police have now booked him under POCSO and BNS.
> It started in 2022 at L R Tiwari College - Instagram, reels, fake friendship, fake love, fake promises of marriage, a calculated trap set step by step
> When she resisted, he didn't stop, he blackmailed her emotionally, extorted money from her, and beat her when she refused
> In 2023, he locked her in a room for two days and assaulted her repeatedly, the girl was so broken that she jumped from the 9th floor of a building to escape him
> Two months in hospital, her body recovered, but what he took from her can never be given back
> Even after her family confronted him and begged him to stay away, he returned on May 28 with a fake profile, demanding nudes and abusing her
> This is the second such incident from Mira Road since June 1 alone, same area & designated pattern, different hindu victims
Why mainstream media isn't covering Mira road cases now?
🪸 🐠 Happy World Reef Awareness Day! 𓆉 𓇼
It's important to spotlight that coral reefs are in crisis, with reefs bleaching and dying off globally. While the biggest threat to their existence is climate change, plastic pollution is one of the *many* man-made threats also playing a significant role in their destruction.
🌊 👉 Despite our need to significantly cut plastic and fossil fuel production, production only continues to increase, harming our valuable oceans and reefs.
⋆。˚⋆🐚 And this is just the start. Find out more in our blog (and how to help): 🔗 https://t.co/VptQHYYtsb
#WorldReefDay #PlasticPollutes
Every plastic wrapper thrown away ends up somewhere, eaten by elephants, sea turtles, and cattle, or floating in lakes, ponds, rivers, and eventually the ocean. The plastic we discard never truly goes away. It simply becomes someone else's problem.
#PlasticPollution
What if something you leave behind could change someone’s life?
Along the Ganga, discarded clothes from ritual dips are being transformed into eco-friendly bags—creating livelihoods for 250 rural women while reducing waste.
Scroll down to see how this simple idea is turning faith into impact →
@divyanshu_hope | @hopepariwar
#Ganga #WomenEmpowerment #CircularEconomy #CleanGanga
[Ganga, River pollution, textile recycling, rural livelihoods]
Imagine if…India taught civic sense as a subject in schools?
Morning assemblies wouldn’t just teach rules they would teach respect.
Classrooms would shape habits, not just marks
Littering would feel wrong even when no one is watching.
Traffic rules would be followed out of care… not fear of fines.
Students would understand that honking doesn’t solve traffic — patience does.
Children would learn that roads are not race tracks, and you cannot write an essay to escape punishment.
Imagine a generation that doesn’t need CCTV cameras to behave well.
Imagine an India… where education didn’t only create engineers.
It also created responsible citizens.
Maybe the subject India needs most…was never added to the timetable.”
Share this if you think civic sense should be a subject in schools.
Every summer, when the heat rises, silence becomes dangerous for wildlife. Not because they disappear, but because they suffer quietly.
In a simple but powerful effort, Sharvan Patel has been digging shallow ponds and filling them with tanker water so that birds and animals have something basic to survive the scorching heat. A small pool of water, but for them, it can mean life.
Across India, heatwaves are becoming more intense, and water sources in rural and forest edges are drying up faster than ever. In such conditions, even a few litres of water placed thoughtfully can help birds, stray animals, and insects survive the day.
Still, one truth remains clear. Small human actions can soften extreme heat for the most vulnerable lives around us.
A bowl of water outside your home might seem ordinary. For them, it could be everything.
Sharvan is doing his part. The question is, will we do ours too.
Credits : thar_desert_photography on IG
#WildlifeConservation #AnimalRescue #HeatwaveRelief
[wildlife conservation India, heatwave animal rescue]
Basti, Uttar Pradesh: On the Manorama River clean-up campaign, student volunteer Akash Gupta says, "Right now, our team of seven people is working on cleaning the river. You can imagine that if we can clean so much of the river in 60 to 65 days, then how much more we could achieve if 70, 700, or even 7,000 people join us. We could remove much more waste and take better care of nature and the environment..."
@mybmc@AshwiniBhide Update:
Vakola Mithi River Cleaning Work Looks, To Be Started..
But, JCB Is Small. Can't Go Deep In Nalla And Clean The Dirt. Again Double Work.
@AshwiniBhide@mayor_mumbai@TawdeRitu
Pls, Use Good & Perfect Machines To Clean Mithi River. Don't Do Double Mehnat.
@NCPspeaks
Week 184 .
River Mithi rejuvenation at full throttle .
Scorching heat and we match with our intense work .
Cleaning and then training people living on river banks to handle solid waste properly .
This is our bit on a hot day in Mumbai .
Every morning, 21-year-old Aakash Gupta stepped into a river most people had already given up on.
The water was black with waste. Plastic floated everywhere.
But in 39 days, he and a small group of boys removed 500+ kg of garbage from UP’s Manorama River — slowly bringing it back to life. #RiverCleanup #YouthChangemakers #EnvironmentalInitiative #CleanIndia #SustainableFuture
[River Cleanup, Youth Leadership, Environmental Conservation, Community Initiative, Sustainable Practices]
https://t.co/f6TSoowT4K
A river in UP had turned into a garbage dump — until 21-year-old Aakash Gupta decided to act.
With no funding or equipment, he and a small group of youngsters spent weeks cleaning the polluted Manorama River, removing over 500 kg of waste in just 39 days.
People mocked them. Told them it was pointless.
But today, the river flows visibly again — proving that real change begins when someone simply refuses to give up.
#RiverCleanup #EnvironmentalAwareness #YouthForChange #SaveOurRivers #SustainableIndia
[River Restoration, Waste Cleanup Drive, Environmental Conservation, Youth Changemakers, Plastic Pollution Awareness]
#MannKiBaat | PM Modi spotlighted two inspiring stories of community action—Akash Gupta and his friends in Uttar Pradesh's Basti, who helped revive the polluted Manorama River, and Goa's retired teacher Balakrishna Aiya, who played a key role in bringing water to households through a pipeline project.
Their efforts, PM said, show how individual initiative can drive meaningful change in society.
Listen in.
#PMModi #MannKiBaat #NarendraModi