English हिन्दी
Connect with us

India News

Gone in 2020: The stars who died this year

2020 has been seen the demise of many a popular personality. From the 90-year-old Sean Connery to the 60-year-old Diego Maradona to many more much younger. Apart from coronavirus pandemic, we lost many celebrities who contributed a lot to the world.

Published

on

2020 has been seen the demise of many a popular personality. From the 90-year-old Sean Connery to the 60-year-old Diego Maradona to many more much younger. Apart from coronavirus pandemic, we lost many celebrities who contributed a lot to the world. 

Here we present a list of noted celebrities whom we’ve lost in 2020.

Sushant Singh Rajput (June 14, 2020)

The mysterious death of the rising Bollywood star Sushant Singh Rajput became the most popular topics for debate in 2020. He was found dead hanging from the ceiling fan at his home in Bandra, Mumbai on June 14, 2020. His mysterious death went from a tragedy to sensational controversy, and then became the matter of a Supreme Court and CBI investigation.

Rishi Kapoor (April 30, 2020)

Veteran actor Rishi Kapoor’s two-year-long battle from cancer ended with his passing. The untimely death left Bollywood fans across the country and the world in sorrow.

Saroj Khan (June 20, 2020)

The demise of the famous Bollywood choreographer Saroj Khan in the pandemic period has been a very shocking moment for the film industry. The three-time national award winner choreographed more than 2,000 songs, including many top Bollywood hits, and memorable songs in Hindi cinema.

The emotional tweets of some of their aficionados are testimony to the sad moment of their passing.

Irrfan Khan (April 29, 2020)

India’s most recognisable face in the West, and a reckoned name in acting, Irrfan Khan passed away fighting a colon infection on April 29, 2020. A man of lucid expression and few words and a strong soul, Irrfan fought many battles and emerged an iconic personality. The death of this rare talent and a brilliant actor left a void in Indian cinema.

Also Read: World highlights 2020: Trump, Covid, Biden, Vaccine?

Ram Vilas Paswan (October 8, 2020)

One of the greatest survivors in Indian politics, President of the Lok Janshakti Party, and the Union minister for consumer affairs, food and public distribution, Ram Vilas Paswan died at the age of 74 after heart surgery. He was a prominent face of Dalit politics in the Centre and a socialist icon. 

Jaswant Singh (September 27, 2020)

Jaswant Singh passed away due to cardiac arrest on September 27, 2020. He was a former union minister and a close aide of former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. He was from Rajasthan and had served as India’s foreign minister, defence minister and finance minister. 

Pranab Mukherjee (August 31, 2020)

Former President and Congress leader Pranab Mukharjee passed away after undergoing treatment for around three weeks. He had to get admitted after testing positive for Covid-19, and he had to undergo surgery after the detection of a brain clot.

Rahat Indori (August 11, 2020)

Rahat Indori, the darling of shayri, died due to coronavirus. Indori earned worldwide name, and recognition with his couplets, and after his demise, he left a huge collection of writing as his inheritance.

Ahmed Patel (November 25, 2020)

Top strategist and senior Congress leader Ahmed Patel was one of the many victims of Covid-19 complications. The sudden demise of this veteran leader was a big loss to the Congress and India’s politics. 

Motilal Vora (December 21, 2021)

Congress stalwart and former chief minister of undivided Madhya Pradesh, Motilal Vora passed away on December 21, 2021, just after celebrating his 93rd birthday.  He held the post of All India Congress Committee treasurer for nearly two decades, and selected as the general secretary in charge in 2018.

Kobe Bryant (January 26, 2020) 

NBA superstar and the producer of Oscar-winning short film Dear Basketball Kobe Bryant passed away on January 26 in a helicopter crash with eight other people.

Also Read: World highlights 2020: Trump, Covid, Biden, Vaccine?

Diego Maradona (November 25, 2020)

A soccer genius, and former Argentine professional footballer, Diego Maradona left the world on November 25, 2020, putting his fans in a deep shock. He led Argentina to win the 1986 World Cup and became a global icon. Beyond the game, he was a larger-than-life persona. Smoking cigars with Fidel, hanging out with Chavez and the like, Diego went suddenly after brain surgery. 

Chadwick Boseman  (August 28, 2020)

The star of the blockbuster superhero Marvel film Black Panther, Chadwick Boseman died after having a four-year battle with colon cancer. 

Also Read: 2020: Pandemic, protest and popular unrest

Dean Jones (September 24, 2020)

A well-known name in international cricket history, Dean Jones left the world at the age of 59. Former test and one-day batsman died at a hotel in India after suffering a cardiac arrest. The global cricket community affectionately call him Deano. 

Sean Connery (October 31, 2020)

Bond, James Bond. The most popular character he played became the image trap which stayed with Sean Connery as long as he lived and in his death. The man with the baritone that could leave aflutter a thousand hearts with the first word died on October 31, 2020, at the age of 90. In his seven decades as an actor, the once-bodybuilder defined aura and style. He won an Oscar in 1988 for his role in The Untouchables, and remains in popular cinema as the more refined Henry Jones Sr from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.

John le Carré (December 12, 2020)

Smiley and Laemas’s creator. A spook who wrote elegant prose of the Circus, the Cold War and Checkpoint Charlie. David Cornwell aka Le Carré left the world at the age of 89. The characters of Le Carré were ordinary men who ran the world, unlike the very macho, licensed to kill corner that popular fiction painted spies into.

Astad Deboo (December 10, 2020)

In a world where politics has unmasked itself into a majoritarian drug, a man who stayed mute through his dance performances bid bye with cancer taking him into its stronger embrace. A pioneer of modern dance in a land of jhumka and thumkas of the popular silver screen, Astad Deboo and his passion left behind memories of performances and his well-wishers and admirers.

Soumitra Chatterjee (November 15, 2020)

Among the many deaths caused by the coronavirus, Ray’s hero Soumitra Chatterjee’s passing was saddening. Yes, all deaths are sad but it took a disease of this magnitude to snatch a talent like Soumitra Chatterjee at 85. He died a month after he tested positive for coronavirus, and reports noted the yo-yo nature of the illness.

S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (September 25, 2020)

The voice of several south Indian superstars and the man who gave voice to Salman Khan’s character in his debut Maine Pyar Kiya, S.P. Balasubrahmanyam was the colossus in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh (and Telangana) and Karnataka, who was as humble to his visitors as to his craft. Balu saar died on September 25, 2020, after his long fight with severe health issues due to the coronavirus infection.

Bhanu Athaiya (October 15, 2020)

India’s first Oscar winner and celebrated costume designer Bhanu Athaiya died at the age of 91. She got the look for Attenborough’s Gandhi spot-on, making the film itself a tour de force. Though often recalled as the first Oscar winner from India, Athaiya designed costumes for over 100 Indian films.

Chetan Chauhan (August 16, 2020)

In his second innings, Chetan Chauhan served as a cabinet minister in Uttar Pradesh. The former India opener had a cricketing career of 12 years, playing 40 Tests, 7 ODIs and was awarded the Arjuna honour. 

India News

Chaos mars Lionel Messi’s Kolkata GOAT Tour event as fans protest poor arrangements

Lionel Messi’s brief appearance in Kolkata was overshadowed by chaos as fans alleged mismanagement, prompting an apology and an official enquiry by the state government.

Published

on

Messy event Chaos kolkata

Lionel Messi’s much-anticipated appearance in Kolkata turned chaotic on Saturday after thousands of fans alleged mismanagement at the Yuva Bharati Krirangan, leaving many unable to even see the Argentine football icon despite holding high-priced tickets

Fans express anger over limited access

The Kolkata leg of the G.O.A.T. Tour was billed as a special moment for Indian football fans, with ticket prices ranging between Rs 5,000 and Rs 25,000. However, discontent grew rapidly inside the stadium as several attendees claimed their view of Messi was obstructed by security personnel and invited guests positioned close to him.

As frustration mounted, some fans resorted to throwing chairs and bottles from the stands, forcing organisers to intervene and cut the programme short.

Event cut short amid disorder

Messi reached the venue around 11:15 am and remained there for roughly 20 minutes. He was expected to take a full lap of the stadium, but that plan was abandoned as the situation deteriorated soon after he emerged from the tunnel.

The disorder also meant that prominent personalities, including actor Shah Rukh Khan, former India cricket captain Sourav Ganguly and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, could not participate in the programme as scheduled.

Organisers whisk Messi away

With fans breaching security and some vandalising canopies set up at the Salt Lake Stadium, the organisers, along with security personnel, escorted Messi out of the venue to prevent further escalation.

Several attendees described the event as poorly organised, with some fans calling it an “absolute disgrace” and blaming mismanagement for spoiling what was meant to be a celebratory occasion.

Mamata Banerjee apologises, orders enquiry

Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee later issued a public apology to Messi and the fans, expressing shock over the mismanagement. She announced the formation of an enquiry committee headed by retired Justice Ashim Kumar Ray, with senior state officials as members.

The committee has been tasked with conducting a detailed probe, fixing responsibility and suggesting steps to ensure such incidents are not repeated in the future.

Continue Reading

India News

Delhi enforces new law to regulate fees in private schools

Delhi has notified a new law to regulate private school fees, capping charges, banning capitation fees and mandating transparent, committee-approved fee structures.

Published

on

Delhi School fees

The Delhi government has officially brought into force a new law aimed at regulating fees in private schools, notifying the Delhi School Education (Transparency in Fixation and Regulation of Fee) Act, 2025. The notification was issued on Wednesday, nearly four months after the Bill was cleared by the Delhi Assembly and received approval from Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena.

The Act establishes a comprehensive framework to govern how private unaided schools fix and collect fees, with a clear emphasis on transparency, accountability and relief for parents facing repeated fee hikes.

What the new Act provides for

Under the legislation, private unaided recognised schools can charge fees only under clearly defined heads such as registration, admission, tuition, annual charges and development fees. The law caps registration fees at Rs 25, admission charges at Rs 200 and caution money at Rs 500, which must be refunded with interest. Development fees have been restricted to a maximum of 10 per cent of the annual tuition fee.

Schools have also been directed to disclose all fee components in detail and maintain separate accounts for each category. Any fee not specifically permitted under the Act will be treated as an unjustified demand.

The law strictly prohibits the collection of capitation fees, whether direct or indirect. It further mandates that user-based service charges must be collected strictly on a no-profit, no-loss basis and only from students who actually use the service.

Accounting norms and restrictions on surplus funds

To ensure financial transparency, schools are required to follow prescribed accounting standards, maintain fixed asset registers and make proper provisions for employee benefits. The transfer of funds collected from students to any other legal entity, including a school’s managing society or trust, has been barred.

Any surplus generated must either be refunded to parents or adjusted against future fees, according to the notification.

Protection for students and parents

The Act also places restrictions on punitive action by schools in fee-related matters. Schools are prohibited from withholding results, striking off names or denying entry to classrooms due to unpaid or delayed fees.

The law applies uniformly to all private unaided schools in Delhi, including minority institutions and schools not built on government-allotted land.

School-level committees to approve fees

A key feature of the legislation is the mandatory formation of a School-Level Fee Regulation Committee by July 15 each year. The committee will include five parents selected through a draw of lots from the parent-teacher association, with compulsory representation of women and members from Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and socially and educationally backward classes.

A representative from the Directorate of Education will also be part of the panel, while the chairperson will be from the school management.

Schools must submit their proposed fee structure to the committee by July 31. The committee can approve or reduce the proposed fees but cannot increase them. Once finalised, the fee structure will remain fixed for three academic years.

The approved fees must be displayed prominently on the school notice board in Hindi, English and the medium of instruction, and uploaded on the school website wherever applicable.

The Delhi government had earlier described the legislation as a significant step towards curbing arbitrary fee hikes after widespread complaints from parents at the start of the academic session.

Continue Reading

India News

Delhi air quality nears severe as smog blankets city, airport issues advisory

Delhi recorded very poor to severe air quality on Saturday, with dense smog affecting visibility and prompting an advisory from the city airport.

Published

on

Delhi pollution

Residents across Delhi and adjoining areas woke up to dense smog on Saturday morning, with air quality levels edging close to the ‘severe’ category in several locations

Data from the Central Pollution Control Board showed the overall Air Quality Index (AQI) at 390 at 8 am, placing it in the ‘very poor’ category. However, multiple monitoring stations in the national capital recorded AQI readings in the ‘severe’ range.

Areas reporting severe air quality included Anand Vihar (435), Ghazipur (435), Jahangirpuri (442), Rohini (436), Chandni Chowk (419), Burari Crossing (415), and RK Puram (404). The high pollution levels were accompanied by a mix of smog and shallow fog, which reduced visibility in several parts of the city during the early hours.

Smog reduces visibility, health risks rise

As per AQI classification, readings between 401 and 500 fall under the ‘severe’ category, indicating serious health risks. Officials note that prolonged exposure at such levels can trigger respiratory problems even among healthy individuals, while those with existing conditions face higher risks.

Dangerous pollution levels have become a recurring concern in Delhi during the winter months. On Friday as well, a thick haze covered the city, with the overall AQI recorded at 386 and visibility remaining poor in several localities.

Delhi airport activates low visibility procedures

Amid the deteriorating air quality, Delhi airport issued an advisory stating that low visibility procedures were in place. In a post on X, the airport confirmed that flight operations were normal at present but advised passengers to stay in touch with their respective airlines for the latest updates.

Despite some marginal improvement over recent weeks, large parts of the capital continue to remain under a blanket of toxic smog. The worsening situation has also intensified political sparring over pollution control measures in the city.

Continue Reading

Trending

© Copyright 2022 APNLIVE.com