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Fourteen Kashmiri students have cracked the UPSC exam 2016, making it the highest number of students to feature in the toppers list. The news was received with elation as this meant that pen and paper has replaced the stones that the Valley's young are increasingly being identified with.
Twenty-six-year-old Suhail Qasim Mir, whose father Mohammad Qasim Mir is a head constable in Srinagar, succeeded in his first attempt to clear the examination, standing 125th among 1,099 candidates selected for the Indian Administrative Service and other top government jobs.
Among the other successful candidates are Bilal Mohiuddin of Handwara's Unsoo village in north Kashmir, who stood 10th in the all-India examination, and Bisma Qazi of Srinagar's Rambagh locality, who ranked 115th.
"You all make us proud. Our youth are full of talent, they only need an opportunity," Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti said on Facebook, while former CM Omar Abdullah tweeted his congratulations to the state's candidates who had cleared the competitive examination, the results of which were declared on 31 May.
Director General of State Police SP Vaid sent a special message to Suhail, while he wished each successful candidate from the state a bright future, a police spokesman said.
For Bilal Mohiuddin, who was earlier in the Indian Forest Service, the stakes have never been higher.
The father in him credits his success to his seven-month-old daughter, Mariam.
"After she was born in September, I cleared my preliminaries. And since then there has been no looking back," he said.
Meanwhile, the DGP also sanctioned a special reward of Rs 10,000, each to 14 wards of serving police personnel out of the Central Police Welfare Fund (CPWF).
Four of them had qualified in a competitive examination conducted by the Board of Professional Entrance Examination in 2016, while 10 had secured 70 percent marks or more in their graduation or post graduation examinations in 2015-16.
(With inputs from PTI.)
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