Fulfilling her lifelong dream, 104-year-old Indian woman learns to read

Kuttiyamma Konthy who learnt to read and write at the age of 104, poses for a photo with a newspaper in Thiruvanchoor village in India's Kerala state on December 28, 2021. (AN photo by Tibbin Augustine)
Short Url
Updated 29 December 2021
Follow

Fulfilling her lifelong dream, 104-year-old Indian woman learns to read

  • Illiterate all her life, Kuttiyamma Konthy started taking reading classes a few months ago
  • Last month, she scored 89/100 in a Kerala state literacy exam

NEW DELHI: When the morning newspaper arrives to her home in Thiruvanchoor village, Kottayam district, 104-year-old Kuttiyamma Konthy carefully studies it from the front page to the last — a luxury unimaginable until a few months ago, when she fulfilled her dream of learning to read and write.
Illiterate all her life, the youngest daughter of landless farm workers from a marginalized community, Konthy knew that education was a passion she would not be able to pursue in her early years. As a teenager, she married an Ayurvedic medicine seller and raised five children.
“Life was harsh in the beginning and survival was the only concern those days,” Konthy told Arab News. “Education was beyond our means and imagination, and social standing.”
Decades later, while taking care of her 10 grandchildren, she learnt the alphabet of her native Malayalam — the language spoken in the southern Indian state of Kerala — but not well enough to read.
Help came unexpectedly, when her 34-year-old neighbor, Rehna John, became aware of her dream.
A literacy teacher, John started giving alphabet books to Konthy and the two met every evening to review progress, which was quicker than expected.




Kuttiyamma Konthy and her literacy teacher Rehna John in Thiruvanchoor village in India's Kerala state on December 28, 2021. (AN photo by Tibbin Augustine)

“She is the brightest among all the literacy students I have taught so far,” John said. “She managed to finish all the courses in three months which were meant to last a year.”
Konthy’s achievement was recognized in November, when she scored 89/100 in a state literacy exam and Kerala’s education minister, V. Sivankutty, announced her test results on social media, with a note that said “age is no barrier to enter the world of knowledge.”
Konthy can now enroll in the fourth year of elementary school — a new chapter she is looking forward to.




Kuttiyamma Konthy reads a book with her granddaughter in Thiruvanchoor village in India's Kerala state on December 28, 2021. (AN photo by Tibbin Augustine)

“It makes me happy that I can study,” she said. “I never allowed my dream to die, and I want to live this dream.”
Being active is also what she attributes her good health to.
Besides some hearing and sight loss, the centenarian student does not complain of any ailments and says: “If you don’t sit idle and keep yourself engaged that keeps you hale and healthy.”
Her morning engagement nowadays, before she goes on to do housework, is the local Malayalam-language broadsheet Kerala Kaumudi.
“I really look for the newspaper and read whatever is published there,” she said. “This is a habit for me and makes me feel nice.”




Kuttiyamma Konthy receives her morning newspaper in Thiruvanchoor village in India's Kerala state on December 28, 2021. (AN photo by Tibbin Augustine)

 


China executes 11 linked to Myanmar scam compounds

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

China executes 11 linked to Myanmar scam compounds

  • Fraud compounds where scammers lure Internet users have flourished across Southeast Asia
  • The 11 people executed Thursday were sentenced to death in September by a court in Wenzhou
BEIJING: China executed 11 people linked telecom scam operations, on Thursday, state media reported, as Beijing toughens its response to the sprawling, transnational industry.
Fraud compounds where scammers lure Internet users into fake romantic relationships and cryptocurrency investments have flourished across Southeast Asia, including in the lawless borderlands of Myanmar.
Initially largely targeting Chinese speakers, the criminal groups behind the compounds have expanded operations into multiple languages to steal from victims around the world.
Those conducting the scams are sometimes willing con artists, and other times trafficked foreign nationals forced to work.
In recent years, Beijing has stepped up cooperation with regional governments to crack down on the compounds, and thousands of people have been repatriated to face trial in China’s opaque justice system.
The 11 people executed Thursday were sentenced to death in September by a court in the eastern Chinese city of Wenzhou, state news agency Xinhua said, adding that the court also carried out the executions.
Crimes of those executed included “intentional homicide, intentional injury, unlawful detention, fraud and casino establishment,” Xinhua said.
The death sentences were approved by the Supreme People’s Court in Beijing, which found that the evidence produced of crimes committed since 2015 was “conclusive and sufficient,” the report said.
Among the executed were “key members” of the notorious “Ming family criminal group,” whose activities had contributed to the deaths of 14 Chinese citizens and injuries to “many others,” Xinhua added.
Fighting fraud ‘cancer’
Fraud operations centered in Myanmar’s border regions have extracted billions of dollars from around the world through phone and Internet scams.
Experts say most of the centers are run by Chinese-led crime syndicates working with Myanmar militias.
The fraud activities — and crackdowns by Beijing — are closely followed in China.
Asked about the latest executions, a spokesman for Beijing’s foreign ministry said that “for a while, China has worked with Myanmar and other countries to combat cross-border telecom and Internet fraud.”
“China will continue to deepen international law enforcement cooperation” against “the cancer of gambling and fraud,” spokesman Guo Jiakun told a regular press conference.
The September rulings that resulted in Thursday’s executions also included death sentences with two-year reprieves to five other individuals.
Another 23 suspects were given prison sentences ranging from five years to life.
In November, Chinese authorities sentenced five people to death for their involvement in scam operations in Myanmar’s Kokang region.
Their crimes had led to the deaths of six Chinese nationals, according to state media reports.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime warned in April that the cyberscam industry was spreading across the world, including to South America, Africa, the Middle East, Europe and some Pacific Islands.
The UN has estimated that hundreds of thousands of people are working in scam centers globally.