బడ్జెట్లో సగటు భారతీయుడిపై వ్యక్తిగతంగా ప్రభావం చూపే అంశాలు ఏమున్నాయో ప్రముఖ పర్సనల్ ఫైనాన్స్ సంస్థ ' అర్థయంత్ర' సహవ్యవస్థాపకుడు 'నితిన్ బీ వ్యాకరణం' ఈటీవీ భారత్తో మాట్లాడారు. అవేంటో ఆయన మాటల్లోనే వినండి....
బడ్జెట్ 2019: మీపై ప్రభావం చూపే అంశాలివే... - ఆర్థిక మంత్రి
ఆర్థికమంత్రి నిర్మలా సీతారామన్ లోక్సభలో బడ్జెట్ ప్రవేశపెట్టారు. అనేక అంశాలను ప్రసంగంలో భాగంగా ప్రస్తావనకు తీసుకువచ్చారు. అయితే సగటు భారతీయుడికి వ్యక్తిగత ప్రయోజనం చేకూర్చే అంశాలు ఇందులో ఏం ఉన్నాయి? అవి ఎలా ప్రభావం చూపుతాయి?
Personal Finance, Budget 2019
బడ్జెట్లో సగటు భారతీయుడిపై వ్యక్తిగతంగా ప్రభావం చూపే అంశాలు ఏమున్నాయో ప్రముఖ పర్సనల్ ఫైనాన్స్ సంస్థ ' అర్థయంత్ర' సహవ్యవస్థాపకుడు 'నితిన్ బీ వ్యాకరణం' ఈటీవీ భారత్తో మాట్లాడారు. అవేంటో ఆయన మాటల్లోనే వినండి....
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 27 June 2019
1. Various of Theater Doc reading for performance on the Khachaturyan sisters (now aged 18,19 and 20), who were charged last month with premeditated murder of their abusive father
2. Zarema Zaudinova, Theater Doc Director, talking about the importance of the reading
3. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Zarema Zaudinova, Theater Doc Director:
"This case (of the Khachaturyan sisters) became the last straw: we (women) have no protection - either we get raped or we will get thrown in prison if we defend ourselves. You don't know what to do. We need a law; we need to talk about it and we need a new norm."
4. Close of Zaudinova
5. Various of Zaudinova and actress Darya Bashkirova in rehearsals
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Darya Bashkirova, actress:
"We are all to some extent the Khachaturyan sisters. So it's very important to talk about it and not close our eyes on their case because it's about all of us - it's about all of us."
7. Various of Bashkirova reading her own story of assault
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 26 June 2019
++STILLS++
8. Maria Khachaturyan
9. Angelina Khachaturyan
10. Krestina Khachaturyan
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 3 July 2019
11. Various of 19-year-old Darya Ageniy looking at her Instagram campaign #ITSNOTMYFAULT
12. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Darya Ageniy, creator of campaign #ITSNOTMYFAULT:
"The police investigator asked me why I decided to defend myself with a knife. I said that I didn't have any other choice because I had tried every other method. I screamed, I hit him, I expressed obvious discontent. And he asked me 'Why specifically a knife?'. So I asked him 'How could I have defended myself otherwise? How do you think I should have done it?' He said: 'You should have called the police.'"
13. Various cutaways
14. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Darya Ageniy, creator of campaign #ITSNOTMYFAULT :
"I understand that we need to take measures right now. To look for protection in the law takes too long - we don't have that much time. Unfortunately, given that the law enforcement services cannot at the moment protect us - I don't know for what reasons - so I believe that we have to learn now to look after ourselves."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 27 June 2019
15. Various establishing shots of Alexei Lipster, lawyer for the Khachaturyan sisters
16. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Alexei Lipster, lawyer for the Khachaturyan sisters:
"We believe that they are not guilty of premeditated murder committed by a group of people. We believe that Angelina and Maria acted in necessary self-defence. Krestina in principle did not take part in this killing."
17. Cutaway
18. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Alexei Lipster, lawyer for the Khachaturyan sisters:
"After that (when he pepper sprayed them), Angelina and Maria decided that if they don't take any steps right now, they would all end up dead. Because the situation was escalating month to month, day after day, and he was becoming more and more violent."
19. Justice statuette
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 28 June 2019
20. Establishing shots of Yulia Gorbunova, Human Rights Watch researcher on domestic violence
21. SOUNDBITE (English) Yulia Gorbunova, Human Rights Watch researcher:
"It's a very disturbing case and I think to me, it basically sums up the inadequacy of our system, how Russian legislation - even if it exists to regulate domestic violence cases - it doesn't work, it's not implemented correctly. It also I think shows very clearly why domestic violence is so dangerous and what happens when it's left without a quick response."
22. Close of Human Rights watch logo
STORYLINE:
One evening last summer, Mikhail Khachaturyan decided that his living room wasn't tidy enough, so he summoned his three teenage daughters one by one and doused each with pepper spray.
There was little unusual about this evening in the Khachaturyan household, according to court records, except for one thing: The sisters decided they couldn't take it anymore.
They waited until their father fell asleep in his rocking chair and attacked him with a kitchen knife and a hammer.
He put up a fight, but died within minutes.
The Khachaturyan sisters, now aged 18, 19 and 20, were charged last month with premeditated murder, in a case that has drawn outrage and shone a light on the way the Russian justice system handles domestic violence and sexual abuse cases.
More than 200,000 people have signed an online petition urging the prosecutors to drop the murder charges, which could land the sisters in prison for up to 20 years.
Supporters of the sisters have protested outside Russian embassies in more than 20 locations abroad, and a theatre has staged a performance in solidarity.
They had planned a major rally in central Moscow on Saturday, but said they had to cancel it, citing the City Hall refusal to provide security for the gathering.
The case of the three timid teenagers has inspired 29-year-old Zarema Zaudinova to direct a performance at the underground Theater Doc last week, combining the hair-raising experiences of the sisters with performers' personal stories.
Some members of the audience walked out after one of the more graphic accounts of abuse.
For Zaudinova, the Khachaturyan case was the last straw.
"We have no protection", she says.
"We will either get raped or we will get thrown into prison if we defend ourselves."
"We are all to some extent the Khachaturyan sisters," explains Darya Bashkirova, an actress who took part in the performance.
"It's very important to talk about it and not close our eyes on their case because it's about all of us - it's about all of us."
Almost 2,000 people have recently posted first-person accounts of abuse and victim-blaming to social media, after a Darya Ageniy, a 19-year-old woman facing criminal charges for injuring her alleged rapist launched the hashtag #ITSNOTMYFAULT.
"Unfortunately, now the law enforcement services cannot protect us", says Ageniy in an interview with the AP.
"I believe that we have to learn now to care for ourselves."
In the interview, Ageniy also alleged that the police investigator in charge of her case suggested she call the police while she was being attacked instead of defending herself.
Court filings showed that the Khachaturyan sisters were repeatedly beaten by their father, a war veteran, and sexually abused.
He had kept a stockpile of knifes, guns and rifles at home despite having been diagnosed with a neurological disorder, and was known to shoot indoors.
He repeatedly threatened neighbours and family with violence.
Their lawyers say the sisters were driven to the edge.
Human Rights Watch has documented a number of cases where "a very clear case of self-defence" was not recognised as such by prosecutors and led to the victim's imprisonment, according to researcher Yulia Gorbunova.
Research on Russian criminal court cases compiled by media outlet Media Zona shows that out of 2,500 women convicted of manslaughter or murder in 2016 to 2018, nearly 2,000 killed a family member in a domestic violence setting.
===========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 27 June 2019
1. Various of Theater Doc reading for performance on the Khachaturyan sisters (now aged 18,19 and 20), who were charged last month with premeditated murder of their abusive father
2. Zarema Zaudinova, Theater Doc Director, talking about the importance of the reading
3. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Zarema Zaudinova, Theater Doc Director:
"This case (of the Khachaturyan sisters) became the last straw: we (women) have no protection - either we get raped or we will get thrown in prison if we defend ourselves. You don't know what to do. We need a law; we need to talk about it and we need a new norm."
4. Close of Zaudinova
5. Various of Zaudinova and actress Darya Bashkirova in rehearsals
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Darya Bashkirova, actress:
"We are all to some extent the Khachaturyan sisters. So it's very important to talk about it and not close our eyes on their case because it's about all of us - it's about all of us."
7. Various of Bashkirova reading her own story of assault
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 26 June 2019
++STILLS++
8. Maria Khachaturyan
9. Angelina Khachaturyan
10. Krestina Khachaturyan
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 3 July 2019
11. Various of 19-year-old Darya Ageniy looking at her Instagram campaign #ITSNOTMYFAULT
12. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Darya Ageniy, creator of campaign #ITSNOTMYFAULT:
"The police investigator asked me why I decided to defend myself with a knife. I said that I didn't have any other choice because I had tried every other method. I screamed, I hit him, I expressed obvious discontent. And he asked me 'Why specifically a knife?'. So I asked him 'How could I have defended myself otherwise? How do you think I should have done it?' He said: 'You should have called the police.'"
13. Various cutaways
14. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Darya Ageniy, creator of campaign #ITSNOTMYFAULT :
"I understand that we need to take measures right now. To look for protection in the law takes too long - we don't have that much time. Unfortunately, given that the law enforcement services cannot at the moment protect us - I don't know for what reasons - so I believe that we have to learn now to look after ourselves."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 27 June 2019
15. Various establishing shots of Alexei Lipster, lawyer for the Khachaturyan sisters
16. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Alexei Lipster, lawyer for the Khachaturyan sisters:
"We believe that they are not guilty of premeditated murder committed by a group of people. We believe that Angelina and Maria acted in necessary self-defence. Krestina in principle did not take part in this killing."
17. Cutaway
18. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Alexei Lipster, lawyer for the Khachaturyan sisters:
"After that (when he pepper sprayed them), Angelina and Maria decided that if they don't take any steps right now, they would all end up dead. Because the situation was escalating month to month, day after day, and he was becoming more and more violent."
19. Justice statuette
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 28 June 2019
20. Establishing shots of Yulia Gorbunova, Human Rights Watch researcher on domestic violence
21. SOUNDBITE (English) Yulia Gorbunova, Human Rights Watch researcher:
"It's a very disturbing case and I think to me, it basically sums up the inadequacy of our system, how Russian legislation - even if it exists to regulate domestic violence cases - it doesn't work, it's not implemented correctly. It also I think shows very clearly why domestic violence is so dangerous and what happens when it's left without a quick response."
22. Close of Human Rights watch logo
STORYLINE:
One evening last summer, Mikhail Khachaturyan decided that his living room wasn't tidy enough, so he summoned his three teenage daughters one by one and doused each with pepper spray.
There was little unusual about this evening in the Khachaturyan household, according to court records, except for one thing: The sisters decided they couldn't take it anymore.
They waited until their father fell asleep in his rocking chair and attacked him with a kitchen knife and a hammer.
He put up a fight, but died within minutes.
The Khachaturyan sisters, now aged 18, 19 and 20, were charged last month with premeditated murder, in a case that has drawn outrage and shone a light on the way the Russian justice system handles domestic violence and sexual abuse cases.
More than 200,000 people have signed an online petition urging the prosecutors to drop the murder charges, which could land the sisters in prison for up to 20 years.
Supporters of the sisters have protested outside Russian embassies in more than 20 locations abroad, and a theatre has staged a performance in solidarity.
They had planned a major rally in central Moscow on Saturday, but said they had to cancel it, citing the City Hall refusal to provide security for the gathering.
The case of the three timid teenagers has inspired 29-year-old Zarema Zaudinova to direct a performance at the underground Theater Doc last week, combining the hair-raising experiences of the sisters with performers' personal stories.
Some members of the audience walked out after one of the more graphic accounts of abuse.
For Zaudinova, the Khachaturyan case was the last straw.
"We have no protection", she says.
"We will either get raped or we will get thrown into prison if we defend ourselves."
"We are all to some extent the Khachaturyan sisters," explains Darya Bashkirova, an actress who took part in the performance.
"It's very important to talk about it and not close our eyes on their case because it's about all of us - it's about all of us."
Almost 2,000 people have recently posted first-person accounts of abuse and victim-blaming to social media, after a Darya Ageniy, a 19-year-old woman facing criminal charges for injuring her alleged rapist launched the hashtag #ITSNOTMYFAULT.
"Unfortunately, now the law enforcement services cannot protect us", says Ageniy in an interview with the AP.
"I believe that we have to learn now to care for ourselves."
In the interview, Ageniy also alleged that the police investigator in charge of her case suggested she call the police while she was being attacked instead of defending herself.
Court filings showed that the Khachaturyan sisters were repeatedly beaten by their father, a war veteran, and sexually abused.
He had kept a stockpile of knifes, guns and rifles at home despite having been diagnosed with a neurological disorder, and was known to shoot indoors.
He repeatedly threatened neighbours and family with violence.
Their lawyers say the sisters were driven to the edge.
Human Rights Watch has documented a number of cases where "a very clear case of self-defence" was not recognised as such by prosecutors and led to the victim's imprisonment, according to researcher Yulia Gorbunova.
Research on Russian criminal court cases compiled by media outlet Media Zona shows that out of 2,500 women convicted of manslaughter or murder in 2016 to 2018, nearly 2,000 killed a family member in a domestic violence setting.
===========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
Last Updated : Jul 5, 2019, 5:54 PM IST