Making The Invisibles Visible -  Save The Underprivileged Children Of Displaced Migrant Workers
Making The Invisibles Visible -  Save The Underprivileged Children Of Displaced Migrant Workers

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

The Maruti Suzuki S-Presso is the company's Mini SUV and it looks like one in its overall proportions. We give you an in depth look at what this car is all about.

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

The front end, especially, takes its design cues from the Vitara Brezza with a sleek, chrome laden grille and square-ish headlamps and a muscular bumper.

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso
Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

The Maruti Suzuki S-Presso comes with squarish headlamps and there are also the LED DRLs that the car gets

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

Viewed in profile, Maruti's new mini SUV has a tall stance and a boxy shape and does manage to stand out of the crowd in the hatchback space.

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

At the rear, the SPresso gets a big boot lid and square-like tail lamps.

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

The Maruti Suzuki S-Presso gets a boot space of 240 litres

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

Inside, the S-Presso gets a smart-looking all-black interior and the dashboard gets body-coloured inserts, in the top trims. The big highlight here is the round centre console, which is inspired by the Mini Cooper.

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

It houses the digital instrument cluster along with Maruti's SmartPlay touchscreen infotainment system, which will have smartphone connectivity. The centre console also houses controls for the AC and power windows along with having a USB port and a 12 V socket.

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

The Maruti Suzuki S-Presso's tall boy stance sees enough headroom at the rear while the wheelbase of 2380mm ensures there's good knee room too

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

Maruti's new Mini SUV gets the same 1.0-litre petrol engine from the Alto K10 hatchback and it makes 67 bhp at 5,500 rpm and 90 Nm of peak torque at 3,500 rpm.

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

The Maruti Suzuki S-Presso comes with 14 inch wheels on the top variants while the Std and the LXi variants come with 13-inch tyres

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

The engine is BS6 compliant and is offered with a 5-speed manual gearbox along with an AMT option as well.

Maruti Suzuki S-Presso

The Maruti Suzuki S-Presso will be offered in four key variants - Standard, LXI, VXI, and VXI+, and these further have 10 options based on trims and transmission choices.

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About The Campaign

About The Campaign

Nearly 20 lakh children live on the streets of India, without an identity, a name to call their own, a place to call home, sleeping on empty stomachs for days and nights. These twenty lakh are children, who have dreams, who have rights, who are our tomorrow. They are living in the shadows today.

During these unprecedented times, not everyone can afford the privilege of social distancing. And not everybody can stay home during the lockdown, simply because they don’t have a home. Those living in poverty are extremely vulnerable, struck with a sudden lack of funds, food, mobility and a struggle for survival. And, as with all humanitarian crises, it is the children who have been affected the most.

It is always the children on the street who are subjected to some of the harshest realities of life. Today they are battling a catastrophic crisis, and it’s time we step in to protect them.

As a part of our COVID-19 response, Save the Children is working across various regions and has already directly reached over 18,000 children and adults to cover their basic needs. The organisation is ensuring their daily needs and their dignity and hygiene are also being cared for. Save the Children has identified 2.5 lakh children in cohorts, across 10 cities in India. Reaching out to these children with emergency relief is a top priority. But this cannot be done alone.

Save the Children and NDTV join hands to bring focus to the lives of children living in street situations. As India fights the Coronavirus, we must not forget one of the most marginalised and excluded groups whose lives have been long ignored – street-connected children. The 21-day campaign will generate public interest and raise funds to ensure these 20 Lakh+ children who live, earn, sleep and eat on our streets are cared for and protected. Amidst the crisis the world is facing, they are most vulnerable, exposed to infection and disease.