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మన్కడింగ్ను క్రియేటివ్గా వాడిన పోలీసులు
వాహనదారులు ట్రాఫిక్ నిబంధనలు పాటించేలా చైతన్య పరిచేందుకు కోల్కతా పోలీసులు వినూత్న ప్రయోగం చేశారు. క్రీడల్లో చర్చనీయాంశమైన మన్కడింగ్ ఫొటోను సందేశాత్మకంగా తీర్చిదిద్దారు.
మన్కడింగ్ను క్రియేటివ్గా వాడేసిన కోల్కతా పోలీసులు
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Published : Mar 27, 2019, 2:47 PM IST
ఐపీఎల్లో అశ్విన్ మన్కడింగ్ వివాదంపై ఓ వైపు చర్చ జరుగుతుంటే... అదే అంశాన్ని కోల్కతా పోలీసులు మాత్రం ట్రాఫిక్ నిబంధనలపై అవగాహనకు ఉపయోగించుకున్నారు. బంతి వేయకుండానే నాన్ స్ట్రైకర్ ఎండ్లో ఉన్న బట్లర్ క్రీజు దాటగా.. అశ్విన్ రనౌట్ చేశాడు. ఈ ఆటగాడి వికెట్ కోల్పోయినందున రాజస్థాన్ రాయల్స్ గాడి తప్పింది. జట్టు ఓటమి పాలైంది.
మన్కడింగ్ ఫొటోను.. ట్రాఫిక్ సిగ్నల్ వద్ద లైన్ దాటిన ఓ వాహనం ఫొటోను పక్క పక్కన పెట్టి ట్వీట్ చేశారు కోల్కతా పోలీసులు. క్యాప్షన్గా ‘క్రీజ్, రోడ్డు ఒకటే.. లైన్ దాటితే మూల్యం చెల్లించుకోక తప్పదని’ పేర్కొన్నారు. వినూత్నంగా ఉన్నందున నెట్టింట వైరల్గా మారింది.
గతంలోనూ జైపూర్ పోలీసులు ఛాంపియన్స్ ట్రోఫీలో బుమ్రా నోబాల్ దృశ్యాన్ని... ఈ విధంగానే ప్రచారానికి వాడుకున్నారు. దీనిపై బుమ్రా స్పందించగా వివరణ సైతం ఇచ్చుకున్నారు.
బుమ్రాకు వివరణ ఇచ్చుకున్న జైపూర్ పోలీసులు
ఐపీఎల్లో అశ్విన్ మన్కడింగ్ వివాదంపై ఓ వైపు చర్చ జరుగుతుంటే... అదే అంశాన్ని కోల్కతా పోలీసులు మాత్రం ట్రాఫిక్ నిబంధనలపై అవగాహనకు ఉపయోగించుకున్నారు. బంతి వేయకుండానే నాన్ స్ట్రైకర్ ఎండ్లో ఉన్న బట్లర్ క్రీజు దాటగా.. అశ్విన్ రనౌట్ చేశాడు. ఈ ఆటగాడి వికెట్ కోల్పోయినందున రాజస్థాన్ రాయల్స్ గాడి తప్పింది. జట్టు ఓటమి పాలైంది.
మన్కడింగ్ ఫొటోను.. ట్రాఫిక్ సిగ్నల్ వద్ద లైన్ దాటిన ఓ వాహనం ఫొటోను పక్క పక్కన పెట్టి ట్వీట్ చేశారు కోల్కతా పోలీసులు. క్యాప్షన్గా ‘క్రీజ్, రోడ్డు ఒకటే.. లైన్ దాటితే మూల్యం చెల్లించుకోక తప్పదని’ పేర్కొన్నారు. వినూత్నంగా ఉన్నందున నెట్టింట వైరల్గా మారింది.
గతంలోనూ జైపూర్ పోలీసులు ఛాంపియన్స్ ట్రోఫీలో బుమ్రా నోబాల్ దృశ్యాన్ని... ఈ విధంగానే ప్రచారానికి వాడుకున్నారు. దీనిపై బుమ్రా స్పందించగా వివరణ సైతం ఇచ్చుకున్నారు.
బుమ్రాకు వివరణ ఇచ్చుకున్న జైపూర్ పోలీసులు
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Lima, Peru - 23 March 2019
1. Various of Fabiana Rosales, wife of Venezuelan opposition leader and self-declared interim president Juan Guaido, on stage during a rally of Venezuelan supporters
2. Crowd signing national anthem
3. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Fabiana Rosales, wife of opposition leader and self-declared president of Venezuela Juan Guaido:
"Today I brought with me a message from your president Juan Guaido (applause), who is waiting for you there (in Venezuela) because there is a lot of work to do. He told me (to tell you) to prepare and to pack light because when you return to Venezuela there is going to be food, medicine, hospitals full (of medicine) and many opportunities for you to go back to work in your country."
4. Wide of stage
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Lima, Peru - 24 March 2019
5. Rosales standing in church during Mass
6. Wide of people in Miraflores church
7. Rosales crossing herself during mass
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Lima, Peru - 23 March 2019
8. Rosales walking down steps of Venezuelan Ambassador to Peru's residence ahead of interview
9. Rosales sitting during interview
10. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Fabiana Rosales, wife of opposition leader and self-declared interim president of Venezuela Juan Guaido:
"Look, I am the wife of President Juan Guaido and I will accompany him regardless of which route he takes, no matter the obstacles I will overcome them with him. As we have done throughout all our years together, and we will continue doing that. I am willing to accompany him on this road, in his struggle to give the best of me so that we can move forward, so that we can take an entire country forward because we are not alone in this struggle, the entire nation wants to see their country doing well."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Caracas, Venezuela - 8 March 2019
11. Wide of Guaido speaking during at a Women's Day event in Caracas
12. Guaido embracing Rosales
13. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Fabiana Rosales, wife of opposition leader and self-declared president of Venezuela Juan Guaido:
"Today our children are suffering what many people are suffering from and it is very painful to watch a child suffer. Today we see how mothers bury their children because of a lack of medicine, lack of food. They see them die at the hands of criminals or they see them cross the border and maybe never see them ever again because we have heard many stories where young people die in another country and the mothers are unable to even bury them. But let me tell you something, this is as far as we'll go."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Caracas, Venezuela - 2 February 2019
14. Guaido and Rosales walking surrounded by large crowd ahead of rally
15. Guaido and Rosales standing on stage during rally
16. Guaido on stage with Rosales doing a pledge with crowd
17. Crowd cheering
18. Rosales smiling on stage with Guaido
19. Rosales standing beside Guaido UPSOUND (Spanish), Juan Guaido, opposition leader: "We are not only asking that they (government of President Nicolas Maduro) respect the Constitution"
20. Rosales standing beside Guaido UPSOUND (Spanish), Juan Guaido, opposition leader: "We want Venezuela to change", Rosales clapping while holding Venezuelan flag
21. Crowd watching
22. Rosales holding religious icon, UPSOUND (Spanish), Juan Guaido, opposition leader: "Europe which is fully supporting us"
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Caracas, Venezuela - 10 February 2019
23. Guaido and Rosales walking in to church with their young daughter
24. Rosales standing next Guaido and daughter in church
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Caracas, Venezuela - 25 January 2019
25. Rosales singing with Guaido and supporters
PERUVIAN GOVERNMENT HANDOUT - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Lima, Peru - 25 March 2019
++MUTE FROM SOURCE++
25. Various of Rosales meeting with the Foreign Minister of Peru Nestor Popolizio in the Peruvian Foreign Ministry
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Santiago, Chile - 20 March 2019
26. Rosales arriving ahead of speech at a university in the Chilean capital
STORYLINE:
With her youthful energy and globe-trotting tours, the 26-year-old wife of Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido is emerging as a prominent figure in his campaign to bring change to the crisis-wracked country.
Fabiana Rosales' age and informal dress, often jeans, while touring Latin America belie an inner toughness and maturity cultivated with her activist husband during violent street protests in Venezuela's capital.
Her husband has since claimed Venezuela's interim presidency with the support of dozens of nations including the United States, setting up a standoff with President Nicolas Maduro, who refuses to step down amid what he calls an attempted coup.
"Look, I am the wife of President Juan Guaido and I will accompany him on whatever route he takes and we will overcome whatever obstacles we face as we have done through all our years together," Rosales said during an interview in Peru's capital Lima.
As her husband leads efforts to remove Maduro through protests at home and by trying to persuade Venezuela's military to abandon the socialist leader, Rosales is trying to drum up international support for Venezuela's beleaguered opposition through highly publicised tours of neighbouring countries.
This month she traveled to Peru and Chile, where she met with the presidents of both countries, and spoke in universities about Venezuela's humanitarian crisis.
On Wednesday, Rosales heads to the White House, where she will meet Vice President Mike Pence, as the U.S. ratchets up sanctions on the Maduro administration.
Rosales met her husband at a youth rally for Voluntad Popular, an opposition party she has worked with since her university years.
She has become a household name in Venezuela in recent months, standing by her husband's side in rallies attended by thousands.
Recently, she has also taken on the role of international ambassador for Venezuela's opposition, as her husband becomes bogged down in domestic affairs.
Guaido declared himself Venezuela's interim president in late January.
The opposition leader was serving as the President of Venezuela's Congress, and said the constitution allowed him to form a transitional government because Maduro had been re-elected in a sham vote last year.
The political challenge turned Guaido into an instant target of the Maduro administration, which blamed him of organising violent protests and quickly put him under a travel ban.
Guaido snuck out of Venezuela for a one week tour of South America, in which he led a failed effort to move several tons of food and medicine into the country.
But upon returning he has focused most of his energy on sustaining his movement, which has lost some of its momentum, as Maduro remains in power and Venezuelans focus on the difficult task of surviving.
In her recent trips abroad, Rosales has met with large crowds of Venezuelan migrants urging them to keep their faith in her husband and telling the region's politicians that "a dictator" like Maduro does not fall in a matter of days.
She says the Venezuelan opposition is making progress, designating ambassadors around the world, and recovering control of Venezuelan oil assets abroad with the help of the United States.
Rosales' opponents have cast her recent tour as a desperate attempt to keep Guaido in the international spotlight, as the Venezuelan crisis drags on and the world's attention moves elsewhere.
The daughter of a journalist and a farmer from the rural state of Merida, Rosales says she became interested in social issues early on as she accompanied her mother to interviews.
She decided to follow in her mother's footsteps and study journalism, but also helped her father on weekends to transport his crops to Caracas, along roads where he was sometimes shaken down by corrupt military guards.
Rosales says she has gone through many of the travails currently faced by Venezuelans, including the harrowing medicine shortages.
Her father died in 2013, after suffering a heart attack.
He could have survived Rosales said, but there was no medicine in his village to stabilise him, and no ambulance to take him to the nearest hospital.
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