Mangaluru, October 05: Renowned car maker Ford India on Friday launched a stylish compact sedan ‘New Ford Aspire’ car to Mangaluru market.
Noted Saxophone musician Dr. Kadri Gopalnath launched the car at a programme held at Ocean Pearl here. Yenepoya Hospital doctor Dr. Deepak Rai was the chief guest, while Ford India Divisional Operation Manager Vijay Sarathi, Regional Sales Manager N. Prasad, Mangaluru Cauvery Ford Sales and Marketing general manager Rajesh Shetty, senior marketing manager Umesh Moolya and others were present.
Vijay Sarathi said that the new Ford Aspire was a combination of power, style and suspense in the compact sedan segment. The car has the best technology, safety and fun to drive DNA and the owners will get satisfaction for their money, he said.
Now, more details of the sub-4m sedan have emerged including its the major changes and its trim options and all the changes are aimed at making the Aspire a closer competitor for other cars in the segment. The car has a new bumper with silver inserts, a redesigned headlamp cluster, new fog lamp housings with premium chrome surroundings and a larger dynamic three dimensional cellular front grille finished in silver. The seats are designed in a away to give special experience of each journey, he said.
The car has reverse parking camera, automatic climate controlling system, two USB slots, push-button start/stop electrochromic IRVM, rain-sensing wipers and automatic headlamps. The car is in seven colours for both petrol and diesel version. The petrol version has automatic model. The petrol version has the capacity of 1.2 ltr and give 20.4 km mileage, while diesel version is available at 1.5 ltr engine with 26.1 km mileage, he explained.
The people in coastal region could contact the Cauvery Ford offices at Alape in Padil and Kottara Chowki, he added.
The price of the petrol version begins from Rs 5.55 lakh and the top-end version is at Rs 8.49 lakh. In the diesel version, the price starts from Rs 6.45 lakh to Rs 8.14 lakh with minimum maintenance cost. This is the only compact sedan car in India which gives 5 years or one lakh km warranty including two years factory warranty and three years extended warranty, said Rajesh Shetty.














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New Delhi (PTI): The Supreme Court on Monday declined to entertain a plea by a group of 13 people seeking its intervention in the deletion of their names from the voter list during the Special Institutional Revision (SIR) in West Bengal, where polling for the first phase of the assembly election will be held on April 23.
A bench comprising Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi termed the petition "premature", directing the aggrieved parties to approach the established appellate tribunals instead.
"Since the petitioners (Quaraisha Yeasmin and others) have already approached the appellate tribunals… in our considered view, the apprehensions expressed in the petition are premature. If the plea is allowed, then necessary consequences will follow,” the bench said in its order, adding that it has not expressed any views on the merits of the plea.
The plea alleged that the Election Commission was summarily deleting names without following due process, and that appeals against these deletions were not being heard in a timely manner.
The Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court has set up as many as 19 tribunals headed by former HC chief justices and judges to decide appeals against deletions of names of persons from the voters’ lists.
Senior advocate D S Naidu, appearing for the poll panel, informed the court that there are approximately 30 to 34 lakh appeals currently pending. "Every tribunal now has over one lakh appeals to handle," the bench said.
The petitioners’ counsel argued that the EC had failed to place necessary orders before the relevant judicial authorities and that the "freezing date" for the electoral rolls should be extended.
"If I am not allowed to argue, then what is the use? Will these appeals be decided within a timeframe or just kept extending?" the counsel asked.
Justice Bagchi, during the hearing, referred to the sanctity of the electoral process and said the right to vote is not merely a constitutional formality but a "sentimental" pillar of democracy.
"The right to vote in a country you were born in is not just constitutional, but sentimental. It is about being part of a democracy and helping elect a government," he said.
He, however, said that the tribunals, manned by former judges, cannot be overburdened by fixing the timelines for adjudications.
"It is not the end justifying the means, but the means justifying the end," Justice Bagchi said.
"We need to protect due process rights. The voter should not be sandwiched between two constitutional authorities," he said, adding that it would not interdict the election process at this stage.
Justice Bagchi noted that the Calcutta High Court Chief Justice had already formulated the manner and mode for appeals, which began on Monday.
"Unless and until an enormous number of voters are excluded or it materially affects the election... the election cannot be cancelled," the bench said, adding that judicial intervention is intended to "promote elections, not interdict them."
The CJI emphasised that the petitioners must exhaust their remedies before the appellate tribunals.
Assembly elections in West Bengal will be held in two phases on April 23 and 29, and votes will be counted on May 4.
