From the Archives\, 1969: All the way with TAA - locked in the luggage hold

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From the Archives, 1969: All the way with TAA - locked in the luggage hold

First published in The Age on September 18, 1969

All the way with TAA – in the luggage hold

Brisbane – Surua, a 25-year-old Papuan porter, will never forget TAA flight 1305 from Port Moresby yesterday.

He was on it, locked in the forward baggage compartment.

The TAA flight that Surua was accidentally locked in.

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Surua, who doesn’t speak English, was wearing only overalls and thongs.

He said later, though a pidgin interpreter: “I thought I was going to die when I heard those engines start.”

Surua was loading luggage on the Boeing 727 at Port Moresby yesterday afternoon for the flight to Brisbane and Sydney.

Shortly before take-off, a woman passenger became ill, and had to be taken off the aircraft.

Surua was sent into the baggage compartment to find her luggage.

25-year-old porter Surua.

Suddenly… click. The compartment door closed, the engines started and away went Flight 1305 Brisbane-bound.

Surua wasn’t uncomfortable. The compartment was pressurised and heated.

Diverted

Back at Port Moresby airport, someone missed Surua, realised what happened, and radioed Flight-Captain Ken Fox that he might have some unscheduled luggage on board.

The flight was diverted to Townsville, 800 miles north of Brisbane, as it was impossible to reach the luggage compartment from inside the plane.

When the plane reached Townsville, there was Surua with a smile on his face.

Surua, after a precautionary medical check, was found to be in perfect health, so airline officials decided since he was in Australia he might like to see the sights.

He was flown on to Brisbane and put in the care of a pidgin-speaking airline official for the night, given warm clothes and taken on a sigh-seeing tour of the city.

Surua, who is single, will be taken to Port Moresby on this morning’s flight to Brisbane.

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From the Archives\, 1969: All the way with TAA - locked in the luggage hold

Hema Malini On Drugs Row: Can't Take It When They Ridicule Our Film Industry

"Can't Take It When They Ridicule Our Industry": Hema Malini On Drugs Row

Hema Malini, 71, spoke to NDTV on a day Jaya Bachchan spoke emphatically in parliament against what she called attempts to vilify the film industry with allegations of drug abuse related to the Sushant Singh Rajput death investigation.

Hema Malini, though a rival in politics, backed Jaya Bachchan's sentiment on Bollywood.

New Delhi:

Veteran actor and BJP MP Hema Malini said Bollywood would "always remain in high esteem" and no one could bring it down in a flash over allegations like drugs and nepotism. In an emotional defence of the film industry, she said, "I got name, fame, respect, everything from this industry... it feels really hurtful."

Hema Malini, 71, spoke to NDTV on a day another senior actor Jaya Bachchan, her contemporary in Hindi films, spoke emphatically in parliament against what she called attempts to vilify the film industry with allegations of drug abuse related to the Sushant Singh Rajput death investigation.

Hitting out at actor and BJP MP Ravi Kishen over his comments on drugs in Bollywood, Jaya Bachchan, a Samajwadi Party member, said in Rajya Sabha: "Just because of a few people, you cannot tarnish the whole industry... Jis thaali me khaate hain usi me chched karte hain," she said.

Hema Malini, though a rival in politics, backed Jaya Bachchan's sentiment. "I want to tell people, Bollywood beautiful place, a creative world, it is an art and culture industry... I feel very hurt when I hear people talking so bad about it, about drugs and things like that...Where doesn't it happen? But if there is a stain, you wash it off and it goes. The stain on Bollywood will also go," she told NDTV.

So many artistes worked so hard to make the industry, continued the actor-politician.

"So many great artistes... matinee idols were gods in human form. People used to wonder whether they were artistes or God. Raj Kapoor, Dev Anand, Dharmendra (Hema Malini's husband), Amit-ji (Amitabh Bachchan) - they are all examples of Bollywood luminaries who made Bollywood synonymous with everything Indian. Bollywood is India. I can't take it when they ridicule our industry like this."

She added that even if there were instances, it did not mean the entire industry is bad.

Tackling allegations of nepotism, which has been in the middle of a raging debate since actor Sushant Singh Rajput was found dead at his Mumbai home on June 14, Hema Malini said: "If somebody's son or daughter joins the industry, it is not a given that they become superstars. Talent and luck matters."

Bollywood, she said, could not be tarnished by a small stain. "So many contributed to this industry - Hrisihkesh Mukherjee, Bimal Roy, Gulzar, Ramesh Sippy, Subhash Ghai...You cannot pull down the industry in one minute."

From the Archives\, 1969: All the way with TAA - locked in the luggage hold

'Their PM Admits Training Terrorists': India Slams Pakistan At UN
September 16, 2020
Home  »  Website  »  National  »  'Their PM Admits Training Terrorists': India Slams Pakistan At UN

'Their PM Admits Training Terrorists': India Slams Pakistan At UN

Speaking at the 45th session of Human Rights Council (HRC), the Indian representative said that it has become habitual for Pakistan to malign India with false and fabricated narratives for its self-serving malicious purposes.

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'Their PM Admits Training Terrorists': India Slams Pakistan At UN
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'Their PM Admits Training Terrorists': India Slams Pakistan At UN
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2020-09-16T10:44:30+05:30
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India on Tuesday described Pakistan as an “epicenter of terrorism” and said no one deserves unsolicited lecture on human rights from Islamabad that has consistently persecuted its ethnic and religious minorities including Hindus, Sikhs and Christians.

Exercising the Right of Reply to the statements made by Pakistan at the 45th session of Human Rights Council (HRC) here, the Indian representative said that it has become habitual for Pakistan to malign India with false and fabricated narratives for its self-serving malicious purposes.

"Neither India nor others deserve this unsolicited lecture on human rights from a country that has consistently persecuted its ethnic and religious minorities, is an epicenter of terrorism, has the distinction of providing pensions to individuals on UN Sanctions list and has a Prime Minister who proudly admits training tens of thousands of terrorists to fight in Jammu and Kashmir,” the Indian diplomat said.

The diplomat said that it was not surprising that other relevant multilateral institutions have been raising serious concerns on Pakistan’s failure to stop terror financing and lack of effective actions against all terror entities in Pakistan.

Highlighting the nefarious designs of Pakistan in Pakistan-occupied  Kashmir, the diplomat said, "the mass influx of outsiders has whittled down the number of Kashmiris to an insignificant number in Pakistan occupied parts of Indian Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Laddakh.”

"In its zeal to reassert its theocratic ideology, it has ensured that ethnic and religious minorities have no future through systematic persecution, blasphemy laws, forced conversions, targeted killings, sectarian violence and faith-based discrimination," the diplomat said.

"Thousands of Sikh, Hindus and Christian minority women and girls have been subjected to abductions, forced marriages and conversions in Pakistan."

On the plight of people in Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh, the Indian diplomat said, "Not a single day has gone by when a family in Balochistan doesn’t find its members picked up or kidnapped by the security forces of Pakistan.”

"Pakistan does well when it comes to intimidation and attacks against journalists, human rights defenders and political dissidents in particular by its state machinery. It is not without a reason that Pakistan has been highlighted by international organizations as a country where journalists are slain and their killers go scot free,” the diplomat said.

India also slammed Pakistan for “abusing various HRC mechanisms and platforms for raising issues, which are extraneous to the mandate of the HRC and which relate to internal affairs of India, with a view to distract the attention of the international community from serious human rights violations committed by it against its own people, including in Indian territories occupied by it.”

India also rejected the reference made by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to Jammu and Kashmir, which is an integral part of India.

"The OIC has no locus standi to comment on internal affairs of India. The OIC has allowed itself to be misused by Pakistan to subverse its own Agenda. It’s for the members of the OIC to decide if it is in their interests to allow Pakistan to do so,” the Indian representative said.

India also advised Turkey to refrain from commenting on its internal affairs and develop a better understanding of the democratic practices.


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