DLSA organises mega service camp at Rohtak village
A mega service camp was organised on the premises of Government Girls Senior Secondary School at Ismaila village in Rohtak district on Thursday.
The camp was organised under the guidance of District Legal Services Authority (DLSA) Chairperson and District and Sessions Judge Neerja Kulwant Kalsan and under the supervision of DLSA Secretary and Chief Judicial Magistrate (CJM) Dr Tarannum Khan.
Various government departments falling under the Sampla block set up help desks and provided the benefit of departmental services to the residents.
Residents of Ismaila 11B and other nearby villages participated in the mega service camp and got their problems resolved. A team of doctors from Civil Hospital, Rohtak, also organised a health check-up and blood donation camp.
CJM Dr Tarannum Khan said the residents can get information about measures to prevent cybercrime on the cybercrime helpline number 1930. The residents can also register a complaint on this helpline number in case of cybercrime, she stated.
The CJM told the villagers that they could call NALSA’s helpline number 15100 to get free legal aid.
She also gave detailed information to the villagers about the victim compensation scheme.The villagers were also told a national lok adalat would be organised at the Rohtak Court Complex on May 10, during which the residents could get their pending cases settled on the spot.
Addressing the blood-donors, organisers and other visitors while inaugurating the blood-donation camp, organised by the District Red Cross Society and Bharat Vikas Parishad’s Bhagat Singh Branch, Dr Tarannum Khan said we should organise more blood donation camps in the summer season to ensure timely provision of blood to the patients.
The CJM honoured the blood donors by presenting them with certificates and mementos. She also appreciated the youth who donated blood on the occasion.
District Red Cross Society secretary Shyam Sunder said more than 50,000 units of blood were collected in a year with the help of more than 100 social organisations and made available to the needy patients coming to the PGIMS from different parts of Haryana as well as other states.
Haryana Tribune