Gaurav Dutta

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Gaurav Dutta

Gaurav Dutta

@dgaurav7

World, Asia & India Rowing, Para Rowing & GEDI. Jt Secy Karnataka Rowing, Sports enthusiast in gen, Para Sports in particular. Still a lot to learn & do.

India Sumali Aralık 2013
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Gaurav Dutta
Gaurav Dutta@dgaurav7·
That chance meeting at the time of his discharge from ALC, Pune & making him throw shotput in the barracks. To seeing him persevere. Hokato Sema (left) & his family waited since 2016 for this day. He proved his mettle in the first big opportunity he got. @adgpi Tagra Raho Rhino
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Vijayaraghavan Venugopal
Vijayaraghavan Venugopal@veira_veira·
Went for a run with a 21-year-old Strava contact today. My selfish goal: run with someone fast. 🏃‍♂️💨 Just the first run together, out of normal conversational style he started calling me "Bro" and "Dude" every five minutes. I eventually had to break it to him that I’m his father’s age. Now I’m just sitting here wondering if "Uncle" or "Sir" would have felt worse. Stick to the name - That I guess is fine! (non-judgmental!)
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Gaurav Tiwari
Gaurav Tiwari@Gaurav_7887·
Is there anyone who has been using the same SIM number for 10 years? Mine - 8 Year
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Gaurav Dutta
Gaurav Dutta@dgaurav7·
@Benarasiyaa This is what a war Correspondent looks like. Not those sitting far away from the war and making reels in front of static weaponry and fighting digital wars from studios.
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Piyush Rai
Piyush Rai@Benarasiyaa·
RT journalist got away in the nick of time. Or else the Israeli missile would have shredded him into pieces.
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Suraj Kumar Bauddh
Suraj Kumar Bauddh@SurajKrBauddh·
"Horrible loot in New Delhi." 🚨❌ A mother went to drop her daughter at school when a group of robbers surrounded her on bikes and looted her. When she resisted, they attacked her with a weapon. If the national capital isn't safe, how can we expect safety anywhere else?
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Shantinath Chaudhary
Shantinath Chaudhary@shantihp·
@LiveLawIndia Shame that it is being treated lightly. SC should just deny that extension strictly. Why do judges allow so many adjournments shamelessly. Allow it only after imposing heavy penalty
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Live Law
Live Law@LiveLawIndia·
#SupremeCourt #CourtroomExchange Sr Adv Menaka Guruswamy: I am on some difficulty on 9th. Please accommodate J Pardiwala (in jest): You will be in difficulty now. You have invited the difficulty Guruswamy was recently elected to the Rajya Sabha on a ticket by All India Trinamool Congress
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John Simpson
John Simpson@JohnSimpsonNews·
I don’t get it. If Hezbollah had flats in this block (unlikely in central Beirut but not impossible) why did the Israelis give everyone inside an hour to get out — including those they wanted to kill? And if there weren’t any Hezbollah people there, why destroy a building with dozens of civilians in it?
The Associated Press@AP

An Israeli airstrike struck an apartment building in central Beirut, on Wednesday. The Israeli army had warned residents to evacuate about an hour before completely flattening it as day broke.

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Bar and Bench
Bar and Bench@barandbench·
The person who is an accused is praying for protection? You are a suspected accused. You are trying to sensationalise the issue: Uttarakhand High Court to gym owner ‘Mohammad’ Deepak Kumar
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Gaurav Dutta
Gaurav Dutta@dgaurav7·
@Jasonphilip8 I know a case of GB, 14 year old, now a para rower doing very well in training and an amateur podcaster. Some day will win a medal for the country.
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Dr Jaison Philip. M.S., MCh
Dr Jaison Philip. M.S., MCh@Jasonphilip8·
A six-year-old boy was brought in because he stopped walking within a day. Yesterday he was running. Today he could not stand. His sneakers were still tied, as though someone believed he would get up and walk out. His father spoke first: “He was fine yesterday, Doctor. This morning his legs became weak. By afternoon, he stopped walking.” Dr X did not examine the legs first. He watched the child laugh when his mother adjusted the bedsheet. Then he noticed it: the smile faded a fraction earlier on the right side. Almost invisible.Enough to matter. He lifted one leg. It fell back softly. Knee jerk: absent. Ankle jerk: absent. Cold sensation: intact. Then he said: “Show me your teeth.” The child smiled. Right nasolabial fold flattened slightly. “Early facial nerve involvement,” Dr X said quietly. Then he crouched beside the stretcher. “Take one deep breath and count.” “One… two… three… four… five… six…” He stopped. The monitor still showed normal oxygen saturation. One student whispered: “But saturation is normal, sir.” Dr X looked up. “It remains normal until late.” “Reduced single-breath count means respiratory muscle weakness has already begun.” The room changed instantly. “Admit to high-dependency. Respiratory monitoring every two hours. Prepare IVIG.” “Diagnosis, sir?” Guillain-Barré syndrome. 2 weeks earlier, he had one day of diarrhea. Likely Campylobacter jejuni. The immune system fought the bacteria. Then mistook peripheral nerve myelin for the enemy. Molecular mimicry. The body attacked its own cables. “The longest nerves fail first,” Dr X told the students. “That is why weakness begins in the legs.” “And when the smile changes early, watch the lungs before the monitor warns you.” Today his smile changed. Today his breath shortened before saturation changed. That is why bedside medicine still matters.
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
On a summer evening in 2015, a man stepped out of a train bathroom carrying enough ammunition to turn a quiet journey into a massacre. What happened in the next minute changed the fate of 554 people. August 21, 2015. High speed train Thalys train 9364 was rushing from Amsterdam to Paris at nearly 300 kilometers per hour. The cars were full. Families, tourists, business travelers. Five hundred fifty four passengers were on board. Among them were three young men from California spending their vacation in Europe. Spencer Stone was 23, an Air Force medical technician. Alek Skarlatos was 22, fresh home from Afghanistan with the Army National Guard. Anthony Sadler was a college senior. They had grown up together. Middle school friends who had crossed an ocean for a holiday. At 5:45 in the evening the calm broke. A shirtless man walked out of a restroom holding a Kalashnikov rifle. Inside his backpack were eight loaded magazines. A handgun. Gasoline. A box cutter. Nearly 270 rounds of ammunition. His name was Ayoub El Khazzani. His plan was simple. Kill as many people as possible. The first person who moved was a 51 year old professor named Mark Moogalian. He did not wait. He rushed forward and grabbed the rifle. The attacker pulled out a pistol and fired. The bullet tore through Moogalian’s neck. He collapsed to the floor as blood poured out. In another car, Spencer Stone had been asleep. The gunshot woke him. He opened his eyes and saw a train employee sprinting past, chased by a shirtless man with a weapon. Skarlatos slapped Stone on the shoulder. Two words. “Let’s go.” There was no discussion. No strategy. Stone ran straight toward the attacker. Skarlatos followed. Sadler followed. Stone reached the gunman first and slammed into him, locking his arms around the man’s neck. The attacker fought wildly, pulling out a box cutter. He slashed Stone across the neck, across the eyebrow, across the thumb. Blood ran down Stone’s face. Stone did not let go. Skarlatos grabbed the rifle and began striking the attacker with it. Sadler helped hold the man down. A British businessman named Chris Norman rushed over and joined them. Together they forced the attacker to the floor and held him there until he lost consciousness. Then Skarlatos noticed something strange. The rifle had jammed. The pistol had no magazine and no round in the chamber. The weapons were useless. Stone had not known that when he charged. With the attacker pinned down, Stone turned to the wounded professor lying on the floor. Moogalian was bleeding out. Stone tore off his shirt and wrapped it around the wound. The bleeding did not stop. So he pushed two fingers directly into the wound and pressed down on the artery. The bleeding slowed. Then it stopped. Stone held that pressure while blood from his own injuries soaked his clothes. He stayed there until paramedics met the train at the next station. Both men survived. Every passenger reached Paris alive. Three days later, French President François Hollande awarded Stone, Skarlatos, Sadler, and Norman the Legion of Honor, France’s highest decoration. In the United States they were honored at the Pentagon. Stone received the Airman’s Medal and the Purple Heart. Skarlatos received the Soldier’s Medal. The attacker was later convicted of attempted terrorist murder and sentenced to life in prison. Life after that day was not simple. Weeks later, Stone was stabbed outside a bar in Sacramento. The knife punctured his heart and lung. Once again, he survived. In 2018 their story reached movie screens in The 15:17 to Paris, directed by Clint Eastwood. In an unusual choice, the three friends played themselves. Skarlatos later served in the Oregon House of Representatives. Sadler became a public speaker. Stone studied international relations and now advocates for veterans. But the most important moment of their lives lasted less than a minute.
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Emmanuel Macron
Emmanuel Macron@EmmanuelMacron·
I have just spoken with the Emir of Qatar and President Trump following the strikes that hit gas production facilities in Iran and Qatar today. It is in our common interest to implement, without delay, a moratorium on strikes targeting civilian infrastructure, particularly energy and water supply facilities. Civilian populations and their essential needs, as well as the security of energy supplies, must be protected from military escalation.
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Priyanka Tripathi (𝕻𝖗𝖎त्रि) 🇮🇳
There are only few who choose Nation over their life.. 🇮🇳 Soldier Rakesh Singh Malhan, the youngest Ashoka Chakra awardee in India's history! At just 22, he laid down his life protecting the nation, eliminating 5 militants in a fierce gunfight despite severe injuries & single-handedly blocking 8 armed militants' escape in Shopian... Salute to such brave hearts 🫡
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Gaurav Dutta
Gaurav Dutta@dgaurav7·
@naomi2009 Why would the govt say he will not be interrogated? After all he is a criminal.
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Naomi Canton
Naomi Canton@naomi2009·
A former Supreme court judge in India gave evidence in Nirav Modi's favour at the High Court on Tuesday. Nirav claims he will be tortured by the investigating agencies if extradited to India. The GOI has given an assurance to the court saying he won't be interrogated at all. The former SC judge said he will be. .timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/inter…
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Birender Dhanoa
Birender Dhanoa@bsdhanoa·
Let me predict an opening 2000 points drop in the BSE Sensex…
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
Nobody remembers the name of the guard who fired the shot. But everyone who was there that night remembers Nicolas Checque. It was December 8, 2012. Somewhere in the darkness outside Kabul, Afghanistan, an American doctor named Dr. Dilip Joseph was being held captive by the Taliban. Intelligence confirmed what no one wanted to confirm: he was in imminent danger. Every hour that passed narrowed the margin between rescue and tragedy. A team of Navy SEALs moved silently through the night toward the compound. Nicolas Checque — 28 years old, from Monroeville, Pennsylvania, a kid who had wanted this exact job since middle school — was at the front. Then a Taliban guard in the courtyard spotted them. He bolted inside. In that single moment, everything changed. The element of surprise — the one thing a Special Operations mission cannot afford to lose — was gone. The hostage's life was no longer measured in minutes. It was measured in seconds. What happened next is recorded in a Navy Cross citation — the military's second-highest combat honor. The language is formal and precise, the way military language always is when it's describing something that has no adequate words. Checque didn't hesitate. He sprinted to the door and made entry. He was met with point-blank fire from an AK-47. He received a mortal head wound. He did not survive. But in those final seconds — in that doorway, in that darkness, in a country the news had largely stopped covering — his charge forward gave his teammates the opening they needed. Dr. Dilip Joseph walked out alive that night. Nicolas Checque had been chasing this life since he was a boy. He grew up just outside Pittsburgh, telling anyone who would listen that he was going to become a Navy SEAL. Not maybe. Not someday if things worked out. He was going to be a SEAL, and he arranged his entire life around making it true. When he learned his vision didn't meet the requirements, he had corrective surgery. He trained relentlessly through high school. He enlisted in 2002, the moment he was able. He earned his place in SEAL Team Six — the same unit that had located Osama bin Laden just eighteen months earlier. He had already deployed to Iraq. To Afghanistan. Multiple times. He had already earned a Bronze Star. He knew — with a specificity that most people never have to acquire — exactly what this work cost. He went back anyway. For years afterward, his Navy Cross was classified. No announcement. No ceremony the public knew about. The world didn't learn what had happened in that dark Afghan courtyard until 2016, when Checque's teammate Senior Chief Edward Byers stood in the White House to receive the Medal of Honor — and dedicated the entire moment to the man who had gone through the door first. "He lived his life as a warrior," Byers said. "He paid the ultimate sacrifice that day." There is a kind of courage that exists entirely outside the light. No cameras rolling. No crowd watching. No certainty that anyone will ever know what you did or why you did it. Just a dark doorway, a fraction of a second, and a choice between moving forward and not. Nicolas Checque made that choice at 28 years old, in the last seconds of his life, for a man whose name he may never have known. The doctor came home to his family. A SEAL Team went home one person smaller. And somewhere in Monroeville, Pennsylvania, a family carries a name the rest of us are only beginning to learn. We remember Nicolas Checque. Not for how he died. For why he moved forward.
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Gaurav Dutta nag-retweet
🚨Indian Gems
🚨Indian Gems@IndianGems_·
No, this is not a tourist spot. This is one of the most dangerous places in India. This scenic spot in Odisha has been destroyed. Red pond is caused by iron oxides from industrial waste. It is highly hazardous. This is how we conserve our environment.
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Gaurav Dutta
Gaurav Dutta@dgaurav7·
@IndiGo6E_CS1 Learn to take appreciation when given. This is why AI bots are not successful.
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Service Team
Service Team@IndiGo6E_CS1·
Thank you for bringing this to our attention,My name is Reina🌹_!As supervisor, I'll be happy assisting on this. Please FOLLOW BACK and send as a DM with the claim details,so that we can assist you promptly
Gaurav Dutta@dgaurav7

Just a few days ago I forgot my wallet on my seat in an @IndiGo6E fight from Delhi. Realised as I was boarding the cab about 45 min after landing. Went to the counter and told them my seat no. Had to wait for an hour, but got it back all cards & cash intact. They took a snap, wallet and boarding card together.

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The Times Of India
The Times Of India@timesofindia·
They defy limits, break barriers & make India beam with pride every single day! Meet the incredible Para Sports nominees at TOISA '25, athletes who have shown the world that true sporting spirit knows no boundaries! Swipe to meet our nominees across Para Archery, Para Athletics, Para Badminton, Para Chess, Para Judo, Para Shooting & more! Grab your passes now toi.in/toisa2025 @cmacgm @LVidu19004 #TOISA2025 #ParaSports #MoreSweatMoreGlory #IndianParaSports
The Times Of India tweet mediaThe Times Of India tweet mediaThe Times Of India tweet mediaThe Times Of India tweet media
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