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Exchange offer is not applicable with this product. Home Minister, Amit Shah, India's new age "Loh Purush" has clarified that the new law would be used "sparsely" — for example only in such cases as dreaded militants like Yasin Bhatkal and Masood Azhar, to name a few. According to Home Ministry data, in India, in the last 15 years, only one outfit, "Deendar Anjuman" appealed against the government's decision to ban it. To put things in perspective, as many as 42 organisations that had been declared illegal during the period under consideration, did not appeal.
The law will also prevent terror masterminds from setting up a new group after their previous outfit is outlawed. The provisions of the law are similar to a UN policy used by the Security Council to apply pressure on a state or entity to comply with the objectives set by the UN without resorting to the use of force.
It, therefore, goes entirely to Amit Shah's iron will, that he could bring in the UAPA, which will go down as a watershed bill in curbing terror on Indian soil.
Sardar Patel integrated more than princely States into the Indian Union. Amit Shah, as Home Minister, has ensured, that the integration exercise which was embarked upon, over 70 years back, has no room for any ambiguity whatsoever. That India will not cede an inch of its territory or sovereignty, is a message that has gone out loud and clear, by India's new age "Loh Purush".
During the many years it took him to save money, Patel — now an advocate — earned a reputation as a fierce and skilled lawyer. The couple had a daughter, Maniben, in and a son, Dahyabhai, in Patel also cared for a friend suffering from the Bubonic plague when it swept across Gujarat. When Patel himself came down with the disease, he immediately sent his family to safety, left his home, and moved into an isolated house in Nadiad by other accounts, Patel spent this time in a dilapidated temple ; there, he recovered slowly.
Patel practised law in Godhra, Borsad, and Anand while taking on the financial burdens of his homestead in Karamsad. When he had saved enough for his trip to England and applied for a pass and a ticket, they were addressed to "V. Patel," at the home of his elder brother Vithalbhai, who had the same initials as Vallabhai. Having once nurtured a similar hope to study in England, Vithalbhai remonstrated his younger brother, saying that it would be disreputable for an older brother to follow his younger brother.
In keeping with concerns for his family's honour, Patel allowed Vithalbhai to go in his place. In Patel's wife Jhaverba was hospitalised in Bombay now Mumbai to undergo major surgery for cancer. Her health suddenly worsened and, despite successful emergency surgery, she died in the hospital. Patel was given a note informing him of his wife's demise as he was cross-examining a witness in court.
According to witnesses, Patel read the note, pocketed it, and continued his cross-examination and won the case. He broke the news to others only after the proceedings had ended. Patel decided against marrying again. He raised his children with the help of his family and sent them to English-language schools in Mumbai. Completing a month course in 30 months, Patel finished at the top of his class despite having had no previous college background.
Returning to India, Patel settled in Ahmedabad and became one of the city's most successful barristers. Wearing European-style clothes and sporting urbane mannerisms, he became a skilled bridge player. Patel nurtured ambitions to expand his practice and accumulate great wealth and to provide his children with a modern education. He had made a pact with his brother Vithalbhai to support his entry into politics in the Bombay Presidency, while Patel remained in Ahmedabad to provide for the family.
Upon hearing of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, he joked to the lawyer and political activist, Ganesh Vasudev Mavlankar, that "Gandhi would ask you if you know how to sift pebbles from wheat. And that is supposed to bring independence. Supported by Congress volunteers Narhari Parikh, Mohanlal Pandya, and Abbas Tyabji, Vallabhbhai Patel began a village-by-village tour in the Kheda district, documenting grievances and asking villagers for their support for a statewide revolt by refusing to pay taxes.
Patel emphasised the potential hardships and the need for complete unity and non-violence in the face of provocation. Patel supported Gandhi's non-cooperation Movement and toured the state to recruit more than , members and raise over Rs. When Gandhi was in prison, Patel was asked by Members of Congress to lead the satyagraha in Nagpur in against a law banning the raising of the Indian flag.
He organised thousands of volunteers from all over the country to take part in processions of people violating the law.
Patel's position at the highest level in the Congress was largely connected with his role from onwards when the Congress abandoned its boycott of elections in the party organisation. Based at an apartment in Mumbai, he became the Congress's main fundraiser and chairman of its Central Parliamentary Board, playing the leading role in selecting and financing candidates for the elections to the Central Legislative Assembly in New Delhi and for the provincial elections of ET View.
Just in Jest. Speaking Tree. ET Citings. Rate Story. Font Size Abc Small. Abc Medium. Abc Large. By Chaitanya Kalbag The two men were born fourteen years and fourteen days apart. They died fourteen years apart, one just three years after independence. Vallabhbhai Patel and Jawaharlal Nehru were both London-educated lawyers. They both worked very closely with Mahatma Gandhi in the long fight for independence. Both went to prison several times.
Both were involved in the thankless partition of the subcontinent in
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