Amitabh, Yash and Shabana awarded honorary doctorates at Leeds
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Indian
film veterans Amitabh Bachchan, Yash Chopra and Shabana Azmi were
awarded honorary doctorate degrees by Leeds Metropolitan University
here Saturday morning.
The
awards function was held at the newly restored Great Hall on the
university's Headingley campus. The university has recently forged
close links with India and the International Indian Film Academy (IIFA)
and has several students from India.
Bachchan has also received an honorary doctorate from De Montfort University, Leicester.
Prominent
among those present during the occasion Saturday were members of the
Bachchan family - his son Abhishek, daughter-in-law Aishwarya and
daughter Shweta Nanda.
During the ongoing IIFA weekend, the
university also awarded honorary doctorate in Business Administration
to India's Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel.
Patel said
after receiving the doctorate: "It's with great humility that I accept
this award being conferred upon me, both as an individual and on behalf
of the people of India. I consider it not only as an award, but as a
recognition of the great partnership which we have between the UK and
India."
Leeds Metropolitan University's partnership with IIFA
offers students and staff the chance to rub shoulders with the leading
lights of Indian cinema, particularly through the university's Northern
Film School.
A university spokesperson said the partnership
would strengthen educational, business, arts and sporting links with
India and offer Leeds Met scholarships to the winners of global
competitions.
Two academic chairs would also be established,
the IIFA Chair for Global Cinema, and an India 60 Chair celebrating 60
years of Indian independence. Leeds Met is hosting and supporting a
range of events in the run up to the IIFA Weekend in Yorkshire,
including a charity cricket match that was played Friday.
IIFA
is also supporting the Global Cool initiative to raise awareness of
global warming and promote the reduction of CO2 emissions. India, home
to around 1.1 billion people, is currently one of the world's most
vulnerable nations to the effects of climate change.
Leeds Met
is also supportive of Global Cool's mission and its vice-chancellor
Simon Lee said: "The ultimate challenge is to remodel ourselves, that's
what IIFA, Wizcraft, Leeds Met, and the people of Yorkshire and India
have in common in believing what education can do. We can remake
ourselves but we can't do it alone."
Indo-Asian News Service
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