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National Students' Union of India (नेशनल स्टूडेंट्स यूनियन ऑफ इंडिया)

National Students' Union of India (नेशनल स्टूडेंट्स यूनियन ऑफ इंडिया)

5 Raisina Road, New Delhi ,
National Students' Union of India (NSUI) is a student movememt which is committed to building a liberal, tolerant, secular, egalitarian and democratic India. In its commitment of bulding a strong, uni
Jantadal United Rajasthan

Jantadal United Rajasthan

10 vivekanand marg c-scheme opp. sms hospital janta dal united , Jaipura ,
Janata Dal (United) (JD(U)) is a political party in India with political presence mainly in Bihar and Jharkhand. It is currently the fifth largest party in Lok Sabha with 20 seats. sharad yadav is a p
Tel: 1414015777
HPSU Panjab University Chandigarh

HPSU Panjab University Chandigarh

Himachal Pardesh Students Union,Panjab University Chandigarh, Chandigarh ,
Regional identities in PU Himachali students a force to reckon Himachali students’ group at Panjab University chandigarh. In an attempt to explore the diverse regional identities in Panjab University today, we walk you through one of the most successful illustrations of a regional student association at Panjab University. So much so that its strength is considered almost analogous to influential Punjab and Haryana student associations. The reference is being made to the Himachal Pradesh Student Union (HPSU) at Panjab University. In place, for long now, the association gives face to almost from 2,500 to 2,700 Himachali students. HPSU campus president Kuldeep Singh Rawat said, “The association provides us with an opportunity to celebrate our culture and ethnic background. Moreover, it strengthens our identity in the university. Our presence is felt when people talk about the top student associations.” The HPSU is a perfect example of deep and successful affirmation of a particular regional identity in the city’s “shuffled” culture. To sort out any admission issues, stability problems at the PU hostels, “pangas”, fights or elections, association comes to the rescue no matter what. The HPSU conducts association meetings every three to four months’ time at the most common hang-outs at the university, mainly, English Hut and the Student Centre. It organises four main events throughout the year in the university, including a blood donation camp, sports meet, yearly trip and an annual function. “The blood donation camp is one of the most successful HPSU events. Our strength is judged from the fact that almost from 700 to 800 units of donated blood are lying in the PGI right now and are being used by any Himachali admitted there and of course for others as well,” added Kuldeep Singh Rawat, President of HPSU The annual function showcasing Himachali folklore at its best is another important event when the association even invites the Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister as the guest of honour. Student associations, like the HPSU, spell out “easy survival” for the people belonging from a particular identity. That “walking the extra mile” for “your own” has strengthened the Himachali students in the university and empowered them to safeguard their interests safely.
Students' Federation Of India NJP Local Committee

Students' Federation Of India NJP Local Committee

Name: The name of the organization shall be Students' Federation of India (SFI). Aims: 1. To organize the students in schools, colleges, universities and other educational institutions of the country and also Indian students studying abroad under its banner to build a powerful and well-knit student movement for the upliftment and betterment of the student community. 2. To take active interest in the struggle for liquidation of the evil legacies of colonialism and for building in our country an independent, democratic and socialist society to ensure a prosperous and progressive future for our people. 3. To establish a democratic, scientific and progressive educational system ensuring education and job for all that will be facilitated by the implementation of comprehensive land reforms, elimination of the stranglehold of international finance capital and indigenous monopoly capitalism. 4. To organize the student community in the struggles of the wider democratic movement of the workers, peasants, and other progressive forces and to seek their cooperation and support to achieve the immediate demands and aims. 5. To achieve the democratic rights of the student community- Right to democratic and independent expression and behavior. Right to form student unions and associations and right to assemble - Right to participate in the management of all educational institutions and of all bodies connected with the academic and other affairs of student life. 6. To work for free universal and compulsory education up to secondary stage and abolition of all school fees up to plus two stage, and for all necessary and complete facilities of education, hostel, scholarships, sports and cultural and social activities that would be adequate and within the reach of all students. To ensure that education upto primary level is provided in mother tongue. 7. To struggle for guarantee of employment after completion of education or unemployment grants till employed and fight for the recognition of the right to work as a constitutionally guaranteed fundamental right. 8. To fight against every manifestation of, and oppression or discrimination based on, religion, caste, language, race, region or gender and to work for secularism, communal harmony, amity and equality of all. 9. To extend warm solidarity to all the progressive forces of the world struggling for freedom, national independence and socialism. 10. To establish fraternal and friendly relations with all other student organizations, which are pledged to work for secularism, democracy and socialism and to have united action with other student organizations on specific issues and demands. To achieve the democratic rights of the student community - Right to democratic and independent expression and behavior. Right to form student unions and associations and right to assemble - Right to participate in the management of all educational institutions and of all bodies connected with the academic and other affairs of student life. Flag: A flag with a red five cornered star in the top left corner, on a white background and Independence, Democracy and Socialism written one beneath the other also in red; the ratio of length and breadth of the flag being 3:2. Affiliation of Student Organizations, Members and Units: Students' Federation of India may permit affiliation to any student organization, based on a State in India or in certain areas of any state or on any educational institution provided that the organization accepts the programme of Students' Federation of India, and expresses its willingness to abide by the Constitution of Students' Federation of India and command a certain minimum number of students on its rolls, as decided by the Central Executive Committee of the Students' Federation of India. Any unit desiring affiliation to Students' Federation of India shall charge its members a subscription fee of Re. 1 per academic session in case of school students, and Rs. 2 per academic session for students from other academic institutions, or $ 1 in case of overseas Indian students and shall pay an affiliation fee of 20 per cent of the subscription fee, per member on its rolls to the Central Executive Committee of the Students Federation of India Apart from the affiliation fee from each member, each unit of the organisation and the affiliate organizations will have to pay a registration fee of Re. 1 and overseas units and affiliates, 1 $ per annum to the Central Executive Committee of the Students' Federation of India. Membership and Rights and Duties of the Members: A student above 12 years of age or studying in standard six and above, whichever is earlier, irrespective of gender, caste, religion, language, race or region and opinion, who accepts the objectives of the Students Federation of India and pays the required annual subscription fee is eligible to be a member. School students are required to pay an annual subscription of 1 rupee, and students from other academic institutions have to pay Rs. 2 or 1 $ in case of overseas Indian students. The membership will be valid for a single academic session only. The differential membership fees shall not in any way mean differential rights and duties of the members. Any member of Students' Federation of India after the completion of ones education is eligible to enroll oneself as a member for another two years more. Even after this period, the conference can elect those ex-students in the Executive Committee or as office bearers of the said committee. Every member will have the right to elect and to be elected and place ones opinions before the executive of the Students' Federation of India. A member will have the right of resignation. All members will have the responsibility of implementing the programmers adopted through general conference and the right to propagate those objectives and activities of the Students' Federation of India. Every member should regularly read the organ of the Students' Federation of India and should take responsibilities of popularizing the organ. Every member can contribute and should collect funds for the organization. Disciplinary Action: Disciplinary action may be taken against any member by the duly constituted committee under whose jurisdiction the member is enrolled, if the person's activities are against the interest or the Constitution, of the organization. A member facing disciplinary charges has the right to explain his or her conduct to the committee initiating action. Expulsion of a member has to be ratified by the next higher committee. A member who is expelled or is facing any disciplinary action has the right to appeal to the higher committees and subsequently up to the Central Executive Committee. Central Executive Committee can disaffiliate any unit, for not conforming to the interest of the organization or acting against the aims and objectives of the organization. State bodies have similar powers vis-à-vis units under them. In the latter case, right of appeal for the units lie with the Central Executive Committee. Disaffiliation of any State committee by the Central Executive Committee must be placed for approval at the next All India Conference. Structure of the Organization: Conferences Executives Affiliated bodies, organized on State, District, Zone/Area, local and institution basis. The Organization and its Rights: The All India Conference will be the highest body of the entire organization. The State Conference will be the highest body of the respective state organization; similarly, the highest body of the organization for any level will be the conference of the organization of that particular level. The All India conferences will be held normally every two years. The Affiliated bodies of Students' Federation of India will elect delegates to the All India Conference by proportional vote in their respective conferences. Delegates to a conference of the Students' Federation of India will be elected from the conferences or organizational conventions of the lower level bodies that come under its jurisdiction. In case of organizational conventions, advance ratification fr
Narendra Modi Supporter's Group

Narendra Modi Supporter's Group

Born on 17th September, 1950 at Vadnagar, a small town in Mehsana district of North Gujarat, Modi grew up in a culture that instilled in him the values of generosity, benevolence and social service. During the Indo-Pak war in the mid sixties, even as a young boy, he volunteered to serve the soldiers in transit at railway stations. In 1967, he served the flood affected people of Gujarat. Endowed with excellent organizational capability and a rich insight into human psychology, he was elected as the student leader of Akhil Bhartiya Vidhyarthi Parishad (All India Students’ Council) and played a prominent role in various socio-political movements in Gujarat. Right from his boyhood days he was confronted with many odds and obstacles, but he transformed challenges into opportunities by sheer strength of character and courage. Particularly when he joined college and University for higher education, his path was beset with hard struggle and painful toil. But in the battle of life he has been always a fighter, a true soldier. Having put a step forward he never looked back. He refused to drop out or be defeated. It was this commitment which enabled him to complete his post graduation in political science. He started with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a socio-cultural organization with a focus on social and cultural development of India and imbibed the spirit of selflessness, social responsibility, dedication and nationalism. During his tenure with the RSS, Modi played several important roles on various occasions including the 1974 anti-corruption agitation and the harrowing 19-month (June 1975 to January 1977) long ‘emergency’ when the fundamental rights of Indian citizens were strangled. Modi kept the spirit of democracy alive by going underground for the entire period and fighting a spirited battle against the fascist ways of the then central government. He entered mainstream politics in 1987 by joining the BJP. Just within a year, he was elevated to the level of General Secretary of the Gujarat unit. By that time he had already acquired a reputation for being a highly efficient organizer. He took up the challenging task of energizing the party cadres in right earnest. The party started gaining political mileage and formed a coalition government at the centre in April 1990. This partnership fell apart within a few months, but the BJP came to power with a two-thirds majority on its own in Gujarat in 1995. Since then, the BJP has been governing Gujarat. Between 1988 and 1995, Modi was recognized as a master strategist who had successfully gained the necessary groundwork for making the Gujarat BJP the ruling party of the state. During this period, Modi was entrusted with the responsibility of organizing two crucial national events, the Somnath to Ayodhya Rath Yatra (a very long march) of Shri L.K. Advani and a similar march from Kanyakumari (the southernmost part of India) to Kashmir in the North. The ascent of the BJP to power at New Delhi in 1998 has been attributed to these two highly successful events, substantially handled by Modi. In 1995, he was appointed the National Secretary of the party and given the charge of five major states in India – a rare distinction for a young leader. In 1998, he was promoted as the General Secretary (Organization), a post he held until October 2001, when he was chosen to be the Chief Minister of Gujarat, one of the most prosperous and progressive states of India. During his stint at the national level, Modi was given the responsibility to oversee the affairs of several state level units, including the sensitive and crucial state of Jammu and Kashmir and the equally sensitive north-eastern states. He was responsible for revamping the party organization in several states. While working at the national level, Modi emerged as an important spokesman for the party and played a key role on several important occasions. During this period, he travelled extensively across the world and interacted with eminent leaders of several countries. These experiences not only helped him develop a global perspective but also intensified his passion to serve India and lead it towards the socio-economic supremacy in the comity of nations. In October 2001, he was called upon by the party to lead the Government in Gujarat. When the Modi government was sworn in on October 7, 2001, the economy of Gujarat was reeling under the adverse effects of several natural calamities, including a massive earthquake in January 2001. However Modi, a master strategist, who was enriched by national and international exposure and experience, decided to take the bull by its horns. The biggest challenge which he had to face, when he took over as the Chief Minster, was the reconstruction and rehabilitation of the areas affected by the massive earthquake of January 2001. Bhuj was a city of rubble and thousands of people were living in temporary shelters without any basic infrastructure. Today Bhuj is proof of how Modi has turned adversity into an opportunity for holistic development. Even when the reconstruction and rehabilitation was going on, Modi did not lose sight of the bigger picture. Gujarat had always focused on industrial growth. Modi decided to correct the imbalance by focusing appropriately on social sectors for an integrated socio-economic growth. He conceived the Panchamrit Yojana – a five-pronged strategy for an integrated development of the state. Under his leadership, Gujarat is witnessing massive transformation in several sectors including education, agriculture, healthcare and several others. He developed a clear vision of his own for the future of the state, launched policy-driven reform programmes, reoriented government’s administrative structure and successfully put Gujarat on the road to prosperity. His intentions and capacity were noticed within the first 100 days of his coming to power. Little wonder that these skills coupled with his administrative acumen, clear vision and integrity of character translated into a landslide victory in the December 2002 general elections and the Modi government was voted back to power with a massive majority of 128 seats in a house of 182. This victory was even more impressive than what is suggested by the figures because of the fact that the opposition Congress party had concentrated its nationwide resources on the Gujarat elections. Skilfully wading his way through the onslaught of a massive slander campaign unleashed by the opposition, Modi gave a crushing defeat to the principal opposition party, the magnitude of which stunned friends and foes alike. On December 22, 2002, when he was sworn-in as the chief minister of Gujarat for the second time, the ceremony had to be held in an open-air stadium because of the sheer number of people who wanted to watch and hear the leader they had so overwhelmingly elected. People’s expectations have been more than fulfilled. Today Gujarat is leading the nation in a variety of sectors be it e-Governance, investments, poverty eradication, power, SEZs, road development, fiscal discipline and many more. The heart of the matter is the people’s participation. Fighting against all odds, he ensured that the Narmada dam reached 121.9m. Height – He even observed a fast to counteract those obstructing the construction. “Sujalam Sufalam” – a scheme to create a grid of water resources in Gujarat is yet another innovative step towards water conservation and its appropriate utilization. Certain novel ideas like introduction of Soil Health Cards, Roaming Ration Cards and Roaming School Cards show his concern for the most common man of the state. His initiatives such as Krishi Mahotsav, Chiranjeevi Yojana, Matru Vandana, Beti Bachao campaign (save the girl child), Jyotigram Yojana, and Karmayogi Abhiyan etc. aim at multi-dimensional development of Gujarat. The vision, concept and time-bound implementation of such initiatives is what makes Modi stand out as a true statesman who thinks of the next generation against the backdrop of politicians who can only think as far as the next elections. Widely regarded as a youthful and energe
BJP Bahraich IT Cell

BJP Bahraich IT Cell

Official Page of BJP Bahraich IT Cell भा ज पा बहराइच आई टी प्रकोष्ठ भा ज पा बहराइच-जिला अध्यक्ष: श्री गुलाबचंद शुक्ला भा ज पा बहराइच-जिला संयोजक: श्री निशंक त्रिपाठी भा ज पा बहराइच-सह-संयोजक व सोशल मिडिया संचालक: श्री हरीश तिवारी
YOUTH     BJP

YOUTH BJP

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) a direct successor of erstwhile Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS) founded in 1980, is a major political party of India. The Bharatiya Jana Sangh was founded in 1951 by Syama Prasad Mookerjee, a nationalist leader, former Union Minister and freedom-fighter. The party advocates welfare social social policies, self reliance, robust economic growth, foreign policy driven by a nationalist agenda, and strong national defense. The BJP is pledged to build up India as a strong and prosperous nation, which is modern, progressive and enlightened in outlook and which proudly draws inspiration from India's ancient culture and values and thus is able to emerge as a great world power playing an effective role in the comity of Nations for the establishment of world peace and a just international order. The Party aims at establishing a democratic state which guarantees to all citizens irrespective of caste, creed or sex, political, social and economic justice, equality of opportunity and liberty of faith and expression. The Party shall bear true faith and allegiance to the Constitution of India as by law established and to the principles of socialism, secularism and democracy and would uphold the sovereignty, unity and integrity of India. The BJP stands for strong national defense, small government and free-market economic policies. Integral humanism has been its core philosophy and identity ever since its inception.
Tel: 9610553553
Students' Federation of India University of Delhi

Students' Federation of India University of Delhi

Students' Federation of India (SFI) is one of the major student organisations in India. SFI is politically linked to the Communist Party of India (Marxist). Founded in 1970, As of 2012, it claims a membership strength of nearly 40 lakhs school and university students. SFI is currently led at the All India level by Ritabrata Banerjee, General Secretary and V.Sivadassan, President. In Himachal Pradesh, Students Federation of India Came into existence during the year 1976-77 in Himachal Pradesh University. Official Website of SFI,Kerala : http://keralasfi.org/
Samajik Nyaya Party - Maharashtra Pradesh

Samajik Nyaya Party - Maharashtra Pradesh

The Party is committed to nationalism, national integration, democracy, positive socialism and value based politics. The party is pledged to build up India a strong and prosperous nation.
Telangana Rastra Samithi

Telangana Rastra Samithi

Telangana Bhavan, Banjara Hills, Hyderabad ,
Telanagana Rastra Samithi (TRS), is a regional party working for separate statehood Telangana.
AAM AADMI PARTY WB N24Parganas

AAM AADMI PARTY WB N24Parganas

This FB page for AAP-WB-N24Parganas is maintained by Volunteers of AAP West Bengal. For Further Information please call the following numbers. 1. Abhijit Chakravarty - +919051214964 2. Prem Chowdhury - +919143741224 3. Pratik Trivedi - +919830466610
Tel: 9718500606