Youth – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sun, 31 May 2026 14:56:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Youth – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 EAGLE Head urges youth to avoid tobacco at awareness rally https://artifex.news/article71044650-ecerand29/ Sun, 31 May 2026 14:56:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article71044650-ecerand29/ Read More “EAGLE Head urges youth to avoid tobacco at awareness rally” »

]]>

Eagle IGP Akke Ravi Krishna and NTR District Collector G. Lakshmisha leading an awareness rally on the occasion of World No Tobacco Day in Vijayawada on Sunday.
| Photo Credit: G.N. RAO

Officials of the Elite Anti-Narcotics Group for Law Enforcement (EAGLE) organised a rally and signature campaign against use of tobacco and its products on Sunday. The rally was organised from NTR Collectorate to Indira Gandhi Municipal Corporation (IGMC) Stadium in connection with World No Tobacco Day.

EAGLE Head and Inspector General of Police (IGP) Ake Ravi Krishna, Collector G. Lakshmisha, officers of National Tobacco Control Programme, National Health Mission, Indian Red Cross Society (IRCS), various government and private organisations, students, NSS Volunteers and NGOs participated.

Speaking on the occasion, Mr. Ravi Krishna urged the youth not to get addicted to cigarettes, gutkha and other tobacco products, which can lead to health problems. “If anybody notices the sale of tobacco products or drugs, alert EAGLE Police by ‘1972’, the IGP said. The organisers distributed pamphlets and organised a signature campaign on the occasion of ‘World No Tobacco Day,’ Mr. Ravi Krishna said.

Meanwhile, Mr. Lakshmisha said that many youngsters are addicted to smoking and subsequently to other products, which cause respiratory, heart and other ailments. “I request the public to join hands to make NTR a tobacco free and drug free district,” the Collector said.

EAGLE Superintendents of Police K. Nagesh Babu, T.T. Prabhakar Babu and G. Swaroopa Rani, DSPs K. Singaiah and T. Durga Prasad and representatives of various health organisations and NGOs also participated in the rally.



Source link

]]>
APSSDC partners with Japan’s FVCC to boost job opportunities for A.P. youth https://artifex.news/article70942773-ecerand29/ Tue, 05 May 2026 13:18:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70942773-ecerand29/ Read More “APSSDC partners with Japan’s FVCC to boost job opportunities for A.P. youth” »

]]>

The Andhra Pradesh State Skill Development Corporation (APSSDC), under its Skill International Programme, has signed a Letter of Intent (LoI) with Fourth Valley Concierge Corporation (FVCC), Japan, to facilitate overseas employment opportunities for the youth of Andhra Pradesh.

The LoI was signed by APSSDC Executive Director D. Manohar and FVCCM Executive Director Aki Takeda. This collaboration aims to create structured pathways for placements in Japan under visa categories such as Specified Skilled Workers (SSW) and the Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services (EHI), with a primary focus on the automobile sector.



Source link

]]>
Thousands Of Ukrainians To Graduate Amid “To Stay Or Leave” Concerns https://artifex.news/russia-ukraine-war-thousands-of-ukrainians-to-graduate-amid-to-stay-or-leave-concerns-6184331/ Thu, 25 Jul 2024 07:03:51 +0000 https://artifex.news/russia-ukraine-war-thousands-of-ukrainians-to-graduate-amid-to-stay-or-leave-concerns-6184331/ Read More “Thousands Of Ukrainians To Graduate Amid “To Stay Or Leave” Concerns” »

]]>

Student life was barely back to normal after Covid-19 when Russia invaded Ukraine (Representational)

Kyiv, Ukraine:

Anton Yushyn spent four years studying Italian at university in Kyiv but the outbreak of war taught him the most valuable lesson of his student life: to prioritise what matters most.

When he enrolled at Kyiv National Linguistic University, Russia had not yet invaded, and his main concerns were socialising and passing exams to placate his parents.

“Maybe it’s not my goals that have changed but my values,” Yushyn, 22, told AFP on graduation day in Kyiv last month.

“It all used to be about parties and having fun. Now you need to spend more time with family and friends because they could be gone at any moment,” he said.

Thousands of Ukrainians graduating from around 300 universities this summer are entering into a society transformed by war — their futures in doubt with no end in sight to the fighting.

As Ukraine mobilises young men to replenish the army’s stretched ranks, male graduates face the prospect of being called up once they turn 25.

Higher education has not been immune from the conflict.

Dozens of teachers and professors have been fighting on the front lines and one-fifth of the sector’s facilities have been damaged or destroyed by Russian bombardments.

In December 2022, a missile landed just a few hundred metres from Yushyn’s campus.

To stay, or leave

But on graduation day, the mood at Yushyn’s alma mater was festive. Perfume hung in the hot summer air and staff congratulated joyful students for completing their studies in the face of historic turbulence.

Student life was barely back to normal after the Covid pandemic when Russia invaded in February 2022.

Universities suspended classes and Korean language student Nikoletta Shova was sent by her parents to stay with relatives in Italy.

The 22-year-old compared the “emotional” time abroad to being in a “stupor”, left wondering if she would ever be able to return.

Teaching restarted at most universities just a few weeks later — online or in person — when Russian forces were still on Kyiv’s outskirts.

Shova returned after three months away and was able to finish her degree in person while raising money for the war effort with classmates.

Now, with her diploma in hand, uncertainty had returned.

She was considering studying abroad — possibly marketing in the United States — but she was also open to finding a creative job at home.

Building a future in Ukraine despite the war was possible, she said, borrowing a popular phrase to underscore that it would take perseverance: “he who doesn’t take risks never drinks champagne”.

Jokes, memes

“So I’m being realistic but with a bit of positivity,” she said of her future.

Daryna Dekhtiar, 22, also a graduate of Kyiv National Linguistic University, went numb when Russia invaded.

“I didn’t cry at all. I just went into autopilot,” she said, but her friends had helped lift her spirits too, she added.

“We created our own memes, our jokes, it made it all much easier,” she recalled.

Dana Andriichuk, who already had secured an office job by graduation, was rushing to meet friends after the ceremony.

She didn’t want to dwell on the relative comfort of her student years or spend too much thinking about the prospect of a long war.

“I’m trying to avoid being a pessimist stuck in the past. I want to live now and not in the future, because we don’t know what will happen next,” she said.

“If the government encourages young people to stay and do everything possible to build a better future even in a state of war — and society becomes nationally conscious — then we can consider staying in the country,” she said.

– ‘Don’t run and hide’ –

Like thousands of other male graduates, Yushyn does not have as much freedom to choose. Authorities have barred men aged between 18 and 60 from leaving Ukraine.

Thousands have left illegally and dozens have died trying.

But Yushyn was resigned to life at home.

“Real men don’t run and hide. If the time comes and I get a summons, I won’t run from it,” he told AFP.

“I can wind myself up, cry, sit here trembling all I want, it won’t change the trajectory of the rocket,” he said.

Whatever the future holds, he said he was unlikely to use Italian, but was resolved to spending his time as best he could.

“I need to use it to the fullest.”

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Waiting for response to load…



Source link

]]>
Union Minister Defines India’s Yuva https://artifex.news/anurag-thakur-indias-youth-start-up-passion-growth-commitment-union-minister-defines-indias-yuva-5326119rand29/ Thu, 28 Mar 2024 07:43:22 +0000 https://artifex.news/anurag-thakur-indias-youth-start-up-passion-growth-commitment-union-minister-defines-indias-yuva-5326119rand29/ Read More “Union Minister Defines India’s Yuva” »

]]>

Anurag Thakur said the youth is shaping the future of India.

New Delhi:

Union Minister Anurag Thakur today said the youth of the country or yuva is totally committed to India’s growth.

“Yuva means empowerment, development, passion, growth and commitment,” Mr Thakur said at the NDTV Yuva Conclave.

“India’s yuva is so committed that the country has become the third biggest start-up hub in the past 10 years,” he said.

He said that the youth is shaping the future of India and that the term yuva has nothing to do with the age.

“When I look at PM Modi, when he’s flying Tejas or doing deep-sea diving, I realise, being a yuva is about your thinking and work.” he said.

There is a lot of awareness among today’s youth, Mr Thakur said, adding that they also know about their rights.

Mr Thakur claimed that his boss, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is the best as he is strict at work, but kind towards the citizens of India.

“Most people here have their bosses. But My boss, PM Modi, is the best. He is the strictest at work, but kindest for the citizens of India,” Mr Thakur said.

“He hasn’t taken a single holiday in 23 years. Even when his mother passed away, he just took a 2 hour break for the funeral and then got back to work. That is the type of commitment the PM has,” he added.

India’s biggest youth disruptors from politics, cinema, music and comedy have come together at NDTV’s Yuva – Youth For Change mega conclave today



Source link

]]>