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అవినీతిపై పోరాడేందుకు లోక్​పాల్​ సూపర్​ ఆఫర్​

ప్రభుత్వ అధికారుల అవినీతిపై పాశుపతాస్త్రం లోక్​పాల్​... తన లోగో, మోటో కోసం ఓ పోటీ నిర్వహిస్తోంది. జూన్​ 13 లోపు ఎంట్రీలు పంపడానికి అవకాశం ఉంది. విజేతలకు రూ.25 వేలు నగదు బహుమతి ఉంటుంది.

అవినీతిపై పోరాడేందుకు లోక్​పాల్​ సూపర్​ ఆఫర్​
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Published : May 28, 2019, 5:25 PM IST

కొత్తగా ఏర్పాటైన 'లోక్​పాల్​' కమిటీ.... తన లోగో, మోటో (నినాదం) రూపొందించడానికి పోటీ ప్రారంభించింది. విజేతలకు రూ.25 వేలు బహుమతి ప్రకటించింది.

ఆకట్టుకొనేలా ఉండాలి..

ఈ పోటీలో పాల్గొనదలిచిన వారు జూన్ 13లోపు తమ ఎంట్రీలను పంపవచ్చు. (మోటో) నినాదం ఆకట్టుకునేలా ఉండాలి. నాలుగైదు పదాలకు మించి ఉండకూడదు. ఇందుకోసం హిందీ, సంస్కృతం, ఆంగ్లభాషలనే వాడాలి.

సరళత, సృజనాత్మకత, కళాత్మక యోగ్యత, విజువల్​ ఇంపాక్ట్​ ఆధారంగా ఎంట్రీలను పరిశీలిస్తారు. లోక్​పాల్​ భావనను ఎంత ప్రభావవంతంగా చెప్పగలుగుతున్నారన్న విషయం ఆధారంగా విజేతను నిర్ణయిస్తారని... అధికారిక ప్రకటన చేసింది లోక్​పాల్​.

ఇప్పటివరకు మోటో కోసం 1,239 ఎంట్రీలు, లోగోకు 365 ఎంట్రీలు వచ్చాయని అధికారులు తెలిపారు.

లోక్​పాల్​..

లోక్​పాల్​, లోకాయుక్త చట్టం 2013 ప్రకారం చట్టబద్ధంగా ఏర్పడింది లోక్​పాల్. ఈ కమిటీ ప్రభుత్వ అధికారుల అవినీతిపై విచారణ చేస్తుంది.

మార్చి 23న రాష్ట్రపతి రామ్​నాథ్​ కోవింద్​ జస్టిస్​ పినాకీ చంద్రఘోష్​ను లోక్​పాల్​ ఛైర్​పర్సన్​గా నియమించారు. మార్చి 27న ఎనిమిది మంది లోక్​పాల్​ సభ్యులతో జస్టిస్ ఘోష్​​ ప్రమాణస్వీకారం చేయించారు.

ఇదీ చూడండి: 'మోదీ కుల్ఫీ'... అభిమానానికి చల్లటి రూపం

కొత్తగా ఏర్పాటైన 'లోక్​పాల్​' కమిటీ.... తన లోగో, మోటో (నినాదం) రూపొందించడానికి పోటీ ప్రారంభించింది. విజేతలకు రూ.25 వేలు బహుమతి ప్రకటించింది.

ఆకట్టుకొనేలా ఉండాలి..

ఈ పోటీలో పాల్గొనదలిచిన వారు జూన్ 13లోపు తమ ఎంట్రీలను పంపవచ్చు. (మోటో) నినాదం ఆకట్టుకునేలా ఉండాలి. నాలుగైదు పదాలకు మించి ఉండకూడదు. ఇందుకోసం హిందీ, సంస్కృతం, ఆంగ్లభాషలనే వాడాలి.

సరళత, సృజనాత్మకత, కళాత్మక యోగ్యత, విజువల్​ ఇంపాక్ట్​ ఆధారంగా ఎంట్రీలను పరిశీలిస్తారు. లోక్​పాల్​ భావనను ఎంత ప్రభావవంతంగా చెప్పగలుగుతున్నారన్న విషయం ఆధారంగా విజేతను నిర్ణయిస్తారని... అధికారిక ప్రకటన చేసింది లోక్​పాల్​.

ఇప్పటివరకు మోటో కోసం 1,239 ఎంట్రీలు, లోగోకు 365 ఎంట్రీలు వచ్చాయని అధికారులు తెలిపారు.

లోక్​పాల్​..

లోక్​పాల్​, లోకాయుక్త చట్టం 2013 ప్రకారం చట్టబద్ధంగా ఏర్పడింది లోక్​పాల్. ఈ కమిటీ ప్రభుత్వ అధికారుల అవినీతిపై విచారణ చేస్తుంది.

మార్చి 23న రాష్ట్రపతి రామ్​నాథ్​ కోవింద్​ జస్టిస్​ పినాకీ చంద్రఘోష్​ను లోక్​పాల్​ ఛైర్​పర్సన్​గా నియమించారు. మార్చి 27న ఎనిమిది మంది లోక్​పాల్​ సభ్యులతో జస్టిస్ ఘోష్​​ ప్రమాణస్వీకారం చేయించారు.

ఇదీ చూడండి: 'మోదీ కుల్ఫీ'... అభిమానానికి చల్లటి రూపం

RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Sainte-Mere-Eglise, Normandy - 30 April 2019
1. Sainte-Mere-Eglise church in main square of village
2. Dummy paratrooper hanging from church's spire
3. Stone memorial, with church in background, reading (French/English): "5-6th June 1944, the 82nd and 101st divisions USA of paratroops liberate the district."
4. Black and white photo on placard for tourists showing American soldiers walking in street of Sainte-Mere-Eglise in 1944, with street and shops in background
5. Various of stone memorial in main town square for Alexandre Renaud, mayor of Sainte-Mere-Eglise in June 1944, reading (French): "Alexandre Renaud, 1891-1966. Mayor of the Liberation. First historian of D-Day"
6. Various of Henri-Jean Renaud, 85-year old French civilian survivor of WWII, sitting in his living room
7. Black and white photograph of Henri-Jean Renaud in 1944 (in the middle, with white shirt and dark jacket)
8. Black and white photograph of Henri-Jean Renaud's parents, Alexandre and Simone, posing with French soldier
9. SOUNDBITE (French) Henri-Jean Renaud, 85-year old French civilian survivor of WWII:
"We could tell it was not normal and that they were enemies of the Germans therefore we understood something was happening. We went by the window and I saw only two or three - because the viewing angle wasn't very large - I saw two or three paratroopers dropping over the roof. And after about one hour or an hour and a half, my father came back home from the fire, he was very excited and said 'this is not a commando, this is not a small local operation as there were sometimes, it really is the D-Day landings'."
10. Sticker representing an American paratrooper dropping on window in living room
11. Various of black-and-white photo taken shortly after D-Day showing 10-year-old Henri-Jean Renaud with two American paratroopers
12. SOUNDBITE (French) Henri-Jean Renaud, 85-year old French civilian survivor of WWII:
"On the morning of June 6th, it was really strange because there was absolutely no fight in Sainte-Mere. We could hear some fighting in the distance, two, to three kilometres around there was some fighting but Sainte-Mere was calm. The civilians came down on the pavement and tried to fraternise with the Americans by making victory signs, waving hello etc. But there wasn't any fraternisation from the Americans because - you have to put yourself in their shoes- they were very nervous, very anxious, they had their finger on the trigger and they were probably told that there were good French people but there were also bad ones (referring to the Nazi collaborators), and that there could be some German soldiers dressed as (French) civilians."
13. Various of black and white photograph of damaged street in Sainte-Mere-Eglise in 1944
14. SOUNDBITE (French) Henri-Jean Renaud, 85-year old French civilian survivor of WWII:
"We were seeing all this tremendous (military) equipment driving past, tanks, all incredible equipment for children. And we were going in the (US military) camps. Americans were a bit reluctant towards having adults in the camps. When there were some adults hanging around in the camp, they were saying…it was not open door for them, but for 10-year-old little kids, we were like a mascot, a family pet, so we used to sneak in, eat at the military refectory. And there was an airfield here with P47 fighter aircrafts which were taking off to go and bomb the frontline. It was absolutely amazing."
15. Replica of US military plane Dakota C-47 which was used on D-Day to drop paratroopers
16. Simone Renaud on front page of Life magazine, dated 7 August 1944, and opening at full-page photo of her putting flowers at the grave of Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., eldest son of former US president Theodore Roosevelt
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Hiesville, Normandy - 29 April 2019
17. Exterior of Lecaudey's farm with plaque outside reading (French) "In this house, on June 6th, 1944 at 9am, General Maxwell D. Taylor, commander of the 101st Airborne Division, set up the first command post of the American Airborne troops"
18. WWII jeep with tourists driving past Lecaudey's farm as part of a tour of the D-Day sites
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Carentan, Normandy - 29 April 2019
19. Various of 97-year old French civilian survivor of WWII Albert Guegan getting ready to go shopping with his housekeeper
20. SOUNDBITE (French) Albert Guegan, 97-year old French civilian survivor of WWII:
"There was a lot of noise and the planes were flying low, flying only about 200 metres high I think. We were in a ditch near our house, with the neighbours. We thought we would be hit by bombs but no, it was not a bombing, it was the (US) paratroopers (landing)!"
21. Albert Guegan talking to reporter and laughing
22. SOUNDBITE (French) Albert Guegan, 97-year old French civilian survivor of WWII:
"At 10.30am (on June 6th) I saw paratroopers arriving, two paratroopers I think, (US) soldiers with Germans (prisoners). There were at least fifty or sixty, maybe more, German soldiers who had just been arrested by Sainte-Marie-du-Mont and were taken to the chateau (Chateau La Colombiere, used as the first field hospital by the American troops)."
23. Close-up of Guegan's eyes
24. SOUNDBITE (French) Albert Guegan, 97-year old French civilian survivor of WWII:
"They (the German prisoners) didn't have their uniforms on anymore, nothing, no helmet, no hat, no belt. The paratroopers put them out of action. Here they went, hop, hop, hop, and they caught about 60 Germans on June 6th. It was 10.30am."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Aromanches - 30 April 2019
25. Dawn shot of one of the beaches on which Allied troops launched their invasion of northern Europe on the morning of 6 June 1944, with floating barges at sea, rest of the artificial harbour built for the amphibious landing
26. Floating barges at sea
STORYLINE:
Seventy-five years on, the charming and peaceful village of Sainte-Mere-Eglise, in Normandy, remains an enduring symbol of D-Day, the Allied victory that saved Europe from Nazi tyranny.
Some 15-thousand Allied paratroopers were dropped in and around the village on 6 June 1944.
American paratrooper John Steele's parachute caught on the church's spire, and for two hours he hung suspended there, feigning death before being taken prisoner.
A dummy paratrooper still hangs from the spire in his memory.
But this anecdote isn't only what made Sainte-Mere-Eglise famous around the world; it was also the first place to be liberated by the Allies.
In 1944, Henri-Jean Renaud was 10 years old.
His father, Alexandre Renaud, was the local pharmacist and mayor of Sainte-Mere-Eglise.
On the night of 6 June 1944, Alexandre Renaud was called out when a house behind the church caught fire - a mere coincidence.
That night, his son remembers something was "not normal" so he went by the window of the family house and saw two or three US paratroopers dropping over the roof.
An hour or so later, his father came back home, "very excited", and confirmed to his family it was the much-awaited D-Day landings.  
The American troops landed on the main square and all-around Sainte-Mere-Eglise and took the village from German occupation around 4.30am.
In front of the town hall, the first American flag was raised on a portion of France.
The next morning, the grateful local population tried to "fraternise with the Americans by making victory signs, waving hello," but Henri-Jean recalls the Allies were very mistrustful.
"They were very nervous, very anxious, they had their finger on the trigger. You have to put yourself in their shoes," he explains.
But with children, it was different.
Henri-Jean and his friends were welcomed in the military camps set up in Sainte-Mere-Eglise as US soldiers saw them as some sort of "mascot" and were happy to share a meal with them at the refectory.
Henri-Jean was also fascinated by the "tremendous" military equipment of the American forces, something he had never seen before.
His eyes light up when he spoke about the tanks and fighter aircrafts he saw for the first time.
"It was absolutely amazing" Henri-Jean told The Associated Press.
Henri-Jean's mother, Simone, became what one of the first of those later called the "Mothers of Normandy."
A photo of her laying flowers at the grave of Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr. from the 4th infantry division, the eldest son of the former American president, was published in Life magazine in August 1944.
This led to her receiving hundreds of letters from American families who had lost a relative during the Normandy invasion.
In a village nearby, Albert Guegan was then a 22-year-old carpenter living in Hiesville with his young wife Madeleine and their 9-month-old baby daughter, France.
Like many French civilians during WWII, Guegan was sent to Nazi-occupied part of Poland in February 1943, one month after his marriage to Madeleine, to work as forced labour for the German war effort.
He was assigned to a construction crew making wooden frames for German bunkers.
Thanks to his craftiness and the help of a friend there, he was declared unfit for duty by a Polish young woman doctor and came back to Normandy a few months later.
On the night of June 6th, Albert Guegan heard "a lot of noise" and saw planes flying unusually low.
He thought the German army was about to bomb Hiesville and decided to take shelter with his family and neighbours in a ditch near his house.
But what came down from the sky were not German bombs.
It was US paratroopers.
It was D-Day.
Guegan's memory of that period is still very vivid, even as a 97-year-old.
The next day, he witnessed the first German soldiers arrested by the Americans.
He recalls seeing a group of about 60 German prisoners, without their uniform, being taken by US soldiers to Chateau La Colombiere, which was used as the first field hospital by the American troops on June 6th, 1944.
Despite the success of the land, air and sea operation, the progression of the Allied troops was a hard-fought campaign.
It took another six days before the area of Hiesville and Carentan, about 12 kilometres (7.5 miles) away from Sainte-Mere-Eglise, was liberated.
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