Thiruvananthapuram s Arya Rajendran likely to become youngest mayor ever at 21
The 21-year-old comes from a lower middle class family and is the daughter of an electrician K Rajendran and LIC agent Sreelatha Rajendran
BusinessToday.In | December 26, 2020 | Updated 10:36 IST
Arya Rajendran likely to become next Thiruvananthapuram mayor (Image: Twitter)
Twenty one-year-old Arya Rajendran is likely to become the next Thiruvananthapuram mayor. The CPI(M) s Thiruvananthapuram district secretariat recommended her name during a party meet. If her name gets approved, Rajendran will become the youngest ever mayor in India.
The 21-year-old comes from a lower middle class family and is the daughter of an electrician K Rajendran and LIC agent Sreelatha Rajendran. Arya Rajendran, a second year BSc Maths student at the All Saints College in Kerala, had won with 2,872 votes from the Mudavanmughal ward of the city corporation.
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Hiked Fees In GGSIPU Spark Outrage, Varsity Blames Delhi Govt
Parents of GGSIPU students have demanded an immediate rollback of decision to hike fees amid pandemic. University website Prakash Kumar 2020-12-18T19:49:56+05:30 Hiked Fees In GGSIPU Spark Outrage, Varsity Blames Delhi Govt outlookindia.com 2020-12-18T20:00:34+05:30
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At a time when people are facing various sorts of hardships due to coronavirus pandemic, the Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University (GGSIPU) in Delhi has hiked the students’ fee adding to the woes of many of the parents.
The university has increased its annual charges from Rs 12,000 to Rs 15,000 for the fresh batch of students within a few weeks after they were offered seats in the colleges affiliated to the varsity.
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Students Federation of India organised a massive agitation on Friday in Vizianagaram, asking the government to take over MR College and start admissions under the ‘aided’ category.
It has also insisted on the government to take over the maintenance of hostels alleging that the MANSAS Trust was not interested in reopening them. SFI leaders Ch. Venkatesh, P. Rammohana Rao and M. Harsha raised slogans against MANSAS Trust and tried to enter the office forcibly. However, police personnel stopped their entry into the office which is located inside the Vizianagaram Fort.
The leaders said stopping of admissions had forced many poor students to join private colleges by paying hefty fees.