Tag: National

  • Special NIA judge Ravindra Reddy who delivered the Mecca Masjid Verdict resigns.

    Judge who delivered MeccaMasjidBlast verdict this morning K Ravinder Reddy has reportedly resigned for ‘personal’ reasons; timing leading to lot of speculation about why he has chosen to quit after delivering verdict in such a high-profile case





    Dramatic development in MeccaMasjid case. Judge Ravinder Reddy who gave the verdict today, acquitting all accused including Aseemanand, is reported to have resigned.



    Ravinder Reddy who is also part of the Telangana Judges Association as president, was suspended by the Hyderabad High court in 2016, after he was part of an agitation against provisional allotment of judicial officers between Telangana and Andhra


    Legal sources in Hyderabad say that Judge Ravinder Reddy has political ambitions and intends to join one of the political parties in Telangana soon. Which is why the resignation.


    The president of All India Majlis-E-Ittehadul Muslimeen Party (AIMIM) called the resignation “Intriguing” and tweeted:
    “Judge who gave acquittal to all accused in Mecca Masjid Blast RESIGNS very intriguing and I am surprised with the Lordship decision.”



    Earlier today, all the five accused in the Hyderabad’s Mecca Masjid blast case, including Swami Aseemanand were acquitted due to lack of clinching evidence.
    “The judge in his order observed that not a single allegation levelled by the prosecution could be proved, and hence he declared all the accused acquitted,” said JP Sharma, the defence advocate.
    A powerful blast, triggered by remote control, had ripped through the over four-century-old mosque here on May 18, 2007, when devotees had gathered for Friday prayers, killing nine people and wounding 58.
    The case was initially probed by the local police before being transferred to the CBI, and finally in 2011 to the NIA, the country’s premier anti-terror investigation agency.
    Altogether, 10 persons owing allegiance to right-wing organisations were named accused in the case.
    But only five of them, Lokesh Sharma, Swami Aseemanand alias Naba Kumar Sarkar, Devendra Gupta, Bharat Mohanlal Rateshwar alias Bharat Bhai and Rajendra Chowdhary were arrested in the case. 

  • Sedition case against trio to be closed as Republic TV didn’t submit raw tapes on ‘sting’

    Hyderabad: Three men were booked for sedition after the news channel had aired clips in which they can purportedly be heard pledging their allegiance to the Islamic State.


    The Hyderabad Police have decided to close a sedition case against three men, nearly a year after news channel Republic TV aired a supposed sting operation in which the trio purportedly pledged their allegiance to the Islamic State group, The Indian Express reported on Monday.
    Deputy Commissioner of Police (Detective Department, Central Crime Station) Avinash Mohanty told the newspaper that Republic TV had not submitted the unedited versions of the clips despite several requests. He said the channel had also refused to turn in the original devices used to record the conversations with the three men.
    Republic TV aired the footage on May 16, 2017. In the videos, Abdullah Basith, Salman Mohiuddin and Abdul Hanan Qureshi – who were detained earlier on their way to join the Islamic State group and later released – can purportedly be heard saying they were ready to join the terror outfit and also plan attacks in India if they failed to reach Syria.
    [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwX1v0vsxUw?rel=0&controls=0&showinfo=0&w=560&h=315]
    Based on these clips, a Special Investigation Team of the Hyderabad Police had registered a case against the three, charging them with sedition and waging war against the state as well as under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act. When they were questioned, the trio claimed that Republic TV had taken their statements out of context and only aired portions in which they were seen talking about the Islamic State group.
    “So we sought the unedited tapes from Republic TV to understand the context and gave them enough time,” the deputy commissioner of police told The Indian Express. “But they did not respond, so we referred the case to the court [to file a closure report].”
    Republic TV “categorically denied” these allegations and said it had “physically handed over the entire unedited footage of the sting operation to the Hyderabad Police”
    “Our reporter also offered, in writing, that her statement be recorded by the Hyderabad Police,” the news channel said in an email to The Indian Express. “If the Hyderabad Police does not want to act against radicalised elements, it is their concern and a matter of public concern as well.’’
  • 5, including Swami Aseemanand, acquitted in 2007 Mecca Masjid blast case

    The NIA had originally charged 10 persons with plotting and carrying out the attack using an improvised explosive device (IED) on May 18, 2007.





    A National Investigation Agency (NIA) Special Court at Nampally in Hyderabad on Monday, citing lack of evidence, acquitted five accused, including Naba Kumar Sarkar alias Swami Aseemanand, in the case of the bomb attack on the Mecca Masjid 11 years ago.


    The blast, using an improvised explosive device, killed nine persons inside the masjid near the historic Charminar of Old City.

    The spot inside the Mecca Masjid complex where the bomb blast took place 11 year ago.   | Photo Credit: G. Ramakrishna






    The others acquitted are Devendra Gupta, Lokesh Sharma, Bharath Mohan Lal Rateshwar and Rajendra Choundary as reported by The Hindu.


    The NIA had originally charged 10 persons with plotting and carrying out the attack on May 18, 2007.


    Accused Sunil Joshi of Madhya Pradesh, a former Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) pracharak, was murdered when the case was investigated.


    Two other accused, former RSS pracharak Sandeep V. Dange and RSS activist and electrician Ramchandra Kalsangra, also from Madhya Pradesh, have been eluding the investigators.



    Investigations against two others from the same State, Tejram Parmar and Amith Chowhan, are continuing.


    Tight security:


    The verdict was pronounced amidst tight security around the Nampally Courts Complex. where all the accused were present.


    Police restricted the movement on roads leading to the court. Vehicles were directed to be parked more than a kilometre away from the court hall.



    Earlier, mediapersons staged a sit-in outside the court’s gates after being restricted by police from entering the complex.

  • Commonwealth Games 2018: Here’s the list of all the 66 medals won by India

    The medal rush that started with weightlifting on day one, ended with badminton on the final day.
    India ended their 2018 Commonwealth Games campaignon Sunday with a total haul of 66 medals – 26 gold, 20 silver, and 20 bronze. The Games that began with a silver for P Gururaja and gold for Mirabai Chanu on the first day ended with a gold for Saina Nehwal and silver for Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty in badminton on Sunday.
    This was India’s second most successful Games overseas, behind only Manchester, 2002.
    The 66 medals is also two medals more than Glasgow 2014, overall, although it was still a long way off the 101 medals the country won at the 2010 Games, which were hosted by India.
    Out of the total of 16 sports that India fielded athletes in at Gold Coast, medals were won in nine of them. Indian shooters raked in the most number of medals (16), followed by the wrestlers (12), the boxers and weightlifters (nine each).
    There were also many firsts for Indians at the Commonwealth Games. Neeraj Chopra became the first javelin thrower from India to win a gold at the Games, while Mary Kom also won a medal of the same colour in her first (and probably last) CWG. Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty also became the first men’s doubles badminton pair from India to win a medal at the Games, while Manika Batra made the country take notice of her with four medals, including a gold in women’s singles.
    The shooters, unsurprisingly, were the most successful among all athletes with a total of 16 medals, including 7 gold medals. The biggest success stories were Anish Bhanwala, Manu Bhaker and Mehuli Ghosh – three teenagers who delivered on their debut at the big stage.
    The weightlifters were in wonderful form, as they kick-started India’s medal haul. Wrestlers returned with a 100% strike rate, headlined by Sushil Kumar’s CWG hat-trick.
    Here is a list of all the 66 medals that India won in Gold Coast.

    Athletics

    Players Event Medal Remarks
    Neeraj Chopra Men’s Javelin Throw GOLD Season best in the final
    Seema Punia Women’s Discus Throw SILVER
    Navjeet Dhillon Women’s Discus Throw BRONZE

    Badminton

    Players Event Medal Remarks
    Saina, Sindhu, Srikanth, Prannoy, Ruthvika, Ashwini, Sikki, Satwik, Pranaav, Chirag Mixed Team GOLD First ever GOLD for India in a badminton event at CWG
    Saina Nehwal Women’s Singles GOLD 
    P V Sindhu Women’s Singles  SILVER
    K Srikanth Men’s singles SILVER
    Satwiksairaj Rankireddy / Chirag Shetty Men’s doubles SILVER First CWG silver medal in men’s doubles badminton
    Ashwini Ponnappa / Sikki Reddy Women’s doubles BRONZE

    Boxing

    Players Event Medal Remarks
    Mary Kom Women’s 46-48 kg GOLD First CWG medal for Mary Kom
    Vikas Krishan Men’s 75 kg GOLD
    Gaurav Solanki Men’s 52 kg GOLD
    Satish Kumar Men’s 91 kg SILVER
    Amit Phangal Men’s 46-49 kg SILVER
    Manish Kaushik Men’s 60 kg SILVER
    Naman Tanwar Men’s 81 kg BRONZE
    Manoj Kumar Men’s 69 kg BRONZE
    Hussamuddin Muhammad Men’s 91 kg BRONZE

    Para Powerlifting

    Player Event MEDAL Remarks
    Sachin Chaudhary Men’s Heavyweight BRONZE Only para athlete to medal

    Shooting

    Player Event Medal Remarks
    Anish Bhanwala Men’s 25m rapid fire pistol GOLD Youngest ever Indian to win CWG medal, Games record
    Manu Bhaker Women’s 10m air pistol GOLD 2nd youngest ever Indian to win CWG medal
    Shreyasi Singh Women’s double trap GOLD
    Jitu Rai Men’s 10m air pistol GOLD New Games Record
    Sanjeev Rajput Men’s 50m Rifle 3 Positions GOLD New Games Record
    Tejaswini Sawant Women’s 50m Rifle 3 Positions GOLD New Games Record
    Heena Sidhu Women’s 25m pistol GOLD New Games Record
    Mehuli Ghosh Women’s 10m air rifle SILVER Unforgettable 10.9 off her last shot to tie with the leader
    Heena Sidhu Women’s 10m air pistol SILVER
    Anjum Moudgil Women’s 50m Rifle 3 Positions SILVER
    Tejaswini Sawant Women’s 50m Rifle prone SILVER Oldest medal winner for India at CWG 2018
    Om Mitharval Men’s 10m air pistol BRONZE First double-medallist at the Games this year
    Om Mitharval Men’s 10m air pistol BRONZE
    Ravi Kumar Men’s 50m pistol BRONZE
    Ankur Mittal Men’s trap shooting BRONZE
    Apurvi Chandela Women’s 10m air rifle BRONZE

    Squash

    Players Event Medal Remark
    Dipika Pallikal / Saurav Ghosal Mixed doubles SILVER First mixed doubles medal in squash at CWG for India
    Dipika Pallikal / Joshna Chinappa Women’s doubles SILVER

    Table Tennis

    Players Event Medal Remarks
    Manika, Mouma, Madhurika, Pooja, Sutirta Women’s team GOLD First ever GOLD that was not won by Singapore in this event
    Sathiyan, Sharath, Harmeet, Sanil, Amalraj Men’s team GOLD
    Manika Batra Women’s singles GOLD First Indian woman to win a singles medal
    Achanta Sharath Kamal /
    Sathiyan G
    Men’s doubles SILVER
    Manika Batra / Mouma Das Women’s doubles SILVER First time an Indian pair entered women’s doubles final
    Harmeet Desai / Sanil Shetty Men’s doubles BRONZE
    Achanta Sharath Kamal Men’s singles BRONZE
    Manika Batra / Sathiyan G Mixed doubles BRONZE Medal in all events she participated im

    Weightlifting

    Player Category Medal Remarks
    Mirabai Chanu Women’s 48 kg GOLD Six clean lifts, six CWG records
    Sanjita Chanu Women’s 53 kg GOLD Games record in Snatch
    Satish Kumar Sivalingam Men’s 77 kg GOLD
    Venkat Ragul Ragala Men’s 85 kg GOLD
    Punam Yadav Women’s 69 kg GOLD
    Pardeep Singh Men’s 105 kg SILVER
    Gururaja P Men’s 56 kg SILVER First medal-winner at the Games for India
    Deepak Lather Men’s 69 kg BRONZE
    Vikas Thakur Men’s 94 kg BRONZE

    Wrestling


    Player Category (All Freestyle) Medal Remarks
    Sushil Kumar Men’s 74 kg GOLD Hat-trick of CWG golds
    Rahul Aware Men’s 57 kg GOLD
    Bajrang Punia Men’s 65 kg GOLD Didn’t concede a single point
    Sumit Men’s 125 kg GOLD
    Vinesh Phogat Women’s 50 kg GOLD
    Mausam Khatri Men’s 97 kg SILVER
    Babita Phogat Women’s 53 kg SILVER Hat-trick of CWG medals
    Pooja Dhanda Women’s 57 kg SILVER
    Somveer Men’s 86 kg BRONZE
    Sakshi Malik Women’s 62 kg BRONZE
    Divya Kakran Women’s 68 kg BRONZE
    Kiran Women’s 76 kg BRONZE
  • Outrage across India after 8-year-old girl raped and murdered

    The rape and murder of an eight-year-old girl has sparked outrage throughout India.
    Asifa Bano disappeared on January 10 while grazing her horses in a meadow in Kathua, a city in the state of Jammu and Kashmir. Her mutilated body was found in a nearby forest a week later.
    On Wednesday (local time) a document was released by the Jammu and Kashmir state police detailing the charges that have been laid in the case. It reveals that the horrendous crime was the result of a religious and political conflict over land.
    Asifa belonged to the Bakarwal, a group of nomadic Sunni Muslim shepherds who have started to settle permanently in some areas, angering the local Hindu population who already lived there.
    According to the police charge sheet, Asifa’s attackers kidnapped her in order to drive her family out of Kathua. She was taken to a nearby Hindu temple where she was drugged, tortured and gang-raped before being strangled and beaten to death.
    Four of the six men who were arrested for Asifa’s rape and murder were police officers, the BBC reports, one of whom allegedly helped search for the girl after she was reported missing.
    Another suspect was a retired government official. They all belonged to the local Hindu community that has been locked in a land dispute with the Bakarwal.
    Thousands of members of the radical right-wing ‘Hindu Unity Platform’ have protested the arrests, demanding that police release the men. On Monday (local time), Hindu lawyers tried to physically stop police from filing their investigation report in court, claiming the men had been framed.
    The gruesome case provoked outrage from many Indians on social media, some of whom compared it to the 2012 rape and murder of a 23-year-old woman on a bus in Delhi.

    Swati Maliwal, chief of Delhi Commission for Women, has announced she will fast indefinitely to demand safety for woman and children in India.
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi issued a statement about Asifa’s murder on Friday (local time).

    “I want to assure the country that no culprit will be spared, complete justice will be done,” he said. “Our daughters will definitely get justice.”

    Source – Newshub

  • Giving Voice To Memories From 1947 Partition

    As India and Pakistan celebrate 70 years of independence this week, the legacy of the August 1947 Partition of British-ruled India that resulted in the birth of these two nations is something both are still coming to terms with.


    Religious violence exploded as Hindus and Sikhs fled toward India, and Muslims toward Pakistan, the newly created homeland for South Asia’s Muslims. Millions of people were uprooted and displaced from cities, towns and villages where their families had lived for generations.
    It was the largest mass migration of the 20th century. Over the course of a year, an estimated 15 million people crossed borders that were drawn up in haste by the British Empire.
    Along the way, scenes of brutality played out: Mobs rampaged through cities and countryside, attacking and killing members of religions not their own. “Ghost trains” full of refugees’ corpses plied the railway tracks in eerie silence. Women, desperate to avoid abduction and rape, committed suicide. There was arson, looting and bombings.

    By the time it was all over, a million people — maybe more — had died.

    Only in recent years have the memories and insights of those who lived through the trauma and chaos of Partition been recorded in a systematic way. For such a central and defining set of events in both India and Pakistan, the stories of Partition witnesses and survivors were, for the most part, not given voice outside their own families.

    “Because their experiences weren’t given importance for so many decades, they just learned to feel that what they experienced wasn’t really worth talking about,” says Guneeta Singh Bhalla.
    She is the founder of the 1947 Partition Archive, a nonprofit based in Berkeley, Calif., that is highlighting the stories and honoring the memories of those who lived through Partition. This grassroots project is racing against time to make sure as many Partition witnesses’ voices as possible are heard and their stories are documented for posterity.
    There is a huge urgency,” Bhalla says, “because the generation that remembers isn’t going to be with us for very long.”
    As a child in India, Bhalla, now 38, used to listen to her own family’s stories from Partition. She is originally from Punjab — a region split between India and Pakistan that, along with Bengal, which was also split, saw some of Partition’s bloodiest violence.
    Her paternal grandmother, a Sikh, fled to India from Lahore, which ended up on the Pakistani side of the new border.
    “My grandmother’s experience was very harrowing,” she says. “She was in a refugee camp for awhile until her brother found her by chance and they drove away in a Jeep. And all the stories of the dead bodies they saw and had to run over at the time just kind of blew me away as a kid. It seemed really unreal.”

    She knew her grandmother had been traumatized. But at school in India, there was silence.
    “You know, with Partition, we’ve been hearing these stories from our grandparents, but it’s not even covered in the history books,” she says. “Basically, the thing that really hit me was the disconnect between the folk history I’d grown up hearing versus the lack of it in our textbooks. There was a disconnect between what we learned in school and what we learned growing up in our families.”

    In 2009, Bhalla, a physicist, visited the Hiroshima Peace Memorial in Japan, and listened to the recorded testimony of those who survived the U.S. atomic bomb attack. The power of their voices hit her hard.

    “It was just like a very huge aha moment,” she recalls, “like, whoa, this needs to be done for Partition.”
    The oral histories, she realized, could bridge the disconnect she’d perceived between what was learned at home and what was taught in schools. She did some research to see if an oral history project existed for Partition, but found nothing. So, she says, “For my own sake, I started recording stories.”
    She sought out Partition witnesses in India and began documenting their memories. At first, she says, “Everyone thought it was kind of a really nuts idea. People had learned to subdue this history and to take it as not serious. It was like, ‘Oh yeah, that thing that happened, but we don’t really talk about it.’ I thought that was a problem in itself.”
    Bhalla moved to the Bay Area to take a job at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. But in her free time, she continued recording interviews with Partition survivors.
    “I just showed up randomly,” she recalls. “I looked up the Sikh temple, mosques and Hindu temples in the area.” At her first stop, the Fremont, Calif., Sikh temple, she set up a table and a sign saying “1947 Stories,” she recalls, and “a huge line of people formed.” She quickly realized the enormity of her task – and that she’d tapped into a great need.
    The stories poured in. Bhalla started recruiting others to help and founded the 1947 Partition Archive. Now, running the archive is her full-time job. The project has recorded more than 4,300 oral histories. More than 500 volunteers have helped record the stories in 22 different languages, from 12 countries — primarily in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh (which became independent from Pakistan in 1971), but also in the U.S., the U.K. and elsewhere. Bhalla herself has conducted interviews with 100 Partition witnesses.
    The archive’s goal is to document 10,000 stories. But time is running out. The stories come from people in their 70s and older, sharing sometimes horrific memories from their childhoods: witnessing train massacres, seeing corpses and decapitated heads, watching parents and other family members attacked and murdered.
    Reena Kapoor, an engineer in Silicon Valley, is one of the 1947 Partition Archive’s volunteers, known as “citizen historians.” Her grandmother — a widow who fled with her children from Peshawar, in Pakistan, to India — crossed back over the border alone to retrieve valuables. Like many, she’d thought the move would be temporary and they could return home after things calmed down; they brought little with them. On her way back to India, she survived a harrowing journey on a train that was attacked.
    “She just sat quietly in a corner pretending she’d been killed too, so she wouldn’t be noticed,” Kapoor says.
    Kapoor says she’s recorded at least 50 stories from Partition survivors. It takes me two or three days to decompress from it,” she says, “because I hear a lot of things that are very disturbing.”
    She says strong bonds can form between interviewers and interviewees — and for the Partition survivors, having the opportunity to share long-held, traumatic memories can be cathartic.
    “Many haven’t really told the story before,” she says. “They’ve told it in bits and parts, there and here. But they haven’t told the details or had the chance to tell their own family members. Some find it easier to tell some of these secrets, for lack of a better word, to someone who they don’t know very well.”
    What can be harder, Kapoor says, is confronting uncomfortable truths about the violence surrounding Partition.

    “I’m still a little surprised by how folks don’t understand why this happened and what it was caused by,” she says.
    Many of those whom she’s interviewed have told her they recall that things were relatively harmonious prior to Partition. But it’s not so simple, she believes.
    “Who were these people who came and killed?” she says. “It was us. We did it to each other. There were deep rifts beneath the surface, deep divides that were easily inciteable.”
    She says the lessons from 70 years ago resonate today.
    “It’s very easy to dehumanize the other side,” she says. “And I think that’s the key. It allows us to do horrific things. When we start talking about ‘them’ and how ‘they’ are, it absolves us of the responsibility of recognizing them as human. And of our values as being universal.”
    In addition to the 1947 Partition Archive, similar projects to document Partition memories have also taken root recently in both India and Pakistan. After decades of silence, there’s a growing recognition of the importance of preserving the voices of Partition and making them heard more widely.


    Being based outside the region means the 1947 Partition Archive is able to gather memories from all sides. In addition to its own website and YouTube channel, the archive’s holdings are also available now through partnerships with Stanford University and several universities in both India and Pakistan.
    “I think being outside of South Asia, having a team of such diverse backgrounds, we were able to create something that catered to sort of everybody,” says Bhalla. “The narratives are different across the borders, the official narratives, and I think what the stories do is they bridge that gap.”
    And in the end, Bhalla says, that’s what the 1947 Partition Archive is all about — bridging gaps and building empathy. The best way to create understanding, she says, is to see that everyone went through similar struggles 70 years ago. People’s personal stories, she says, are the most powerful way to bring that out.


    Source – NPR.ORG
  • Supreme Court suspends ban on trade in cattle for slaughter

    New Delhi: India’s Supreme Court suspended on Tuesday a government ban on the trade of cattle for slaughter, a boost for the multi-billion dollar beef and leather industries mostly run by members of the Muslim minority.
    India’s meat and leather industries are worth more than $16 billion in annual sales.
    Pic: Rediff
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist government in May decreed that markets could only trade cattle for agricultural purposes, such as ploughing and dairy production, on the grounds of stopping cruelty to animals.

    The slaughter of cows, considered holy in Hinduism, was already banned in most parts of India, but Hindu hardliners and cow vigilante groups have been increasingly asserting themselves since Modi’s government came to power in 2014.
    Muslims, who make up 14 percent of India’s 1.3 billion people, said the May government decree against the beef and leather industry employing millions of workers was aimed at marginalising them.
    The Supreme Court, in issuing its decision, stressed the hardship that the ban on the trade of cattle for slaughter had imposed.
    “The livelihood of people should not be affected by this,” Supreme Court Chief Justice Jagdish Singh Khehar said in his ruling.
    India’s meat and leather industries are worth more than $16 billion in annual sales.
    After the decision, the government told the court it would modify and reissue its May order, Additional Solicitor General P.S. Narasimha said.
    The issue has become highly emotive with a wave of attacks on Muslims suspected of either storing meat or transporting cattle for slaughter. An estimated 28 people have been killed in cow-related violence since 2010.
    Late last month, after months of silence on the violence, Modi condemned lynchings.
    Media has reported at least two cases of attacks on Muslims since Modi spoke out.
    Abdul Faheem Qureshi, the head of the Muslim All India Jamiatul Quresh Action Committee that supports meat sellers, welcomed the court decision.
    “We have to now restore the confidence of cattle traders that they can resume their business. It’ a victory for us,” said Faheem Qureshi, who had lodged a petition with the Supreme Court against the government ban.
  • ಅಮರನಾಥ್ ಯಾತ್ರಾರ್ಥಿಗಳ ಮೇಲೆ ಭಯೋತ್ಪಾದಕರ ಪೈಶಾಚಿಕ ಕೃತ್ಯ

    ಶ್ರೀನಗರ, ಜುಲೈ 10: ಭಾರೀ ಭದ್ರತಾ ಬಂದೋಬಸ್ತಿನ ನಡುವೆಯೂ ಭಯೋತ್ಪಾದಕರು ಪೈಶಾಚಿಕ ಕೃತ್ಯ ಎಸಗಿದ್ದು, ಅಮರನಾಥ್ ಯಾತ್ರಾರ್ಥಿಗಳ ಮೇಲೆ ಗುಂಡಿನ ದಾಳಿ ನಡೆಸಿದ್ದಾರೆ.

    ಪ್ರಾಥಮಿಕ ಮಾಹಿತಿಗಳ ಪ್ರಕಾರ ಉಗ್ರರ ದಾಳಿಯಲ್ಲಿ ಕನಿಷ್ಠ ಇಬ್ಬರು ಸಾವನ್ನಪ್ಪಿದ್ದು, ಒಂಬತ್ತು ಜನ ಗಾಯಗೊಂಡಿದ್ದಾರೆಂದು ANI ಸುದ್ದಿಸಂಸ್ಥೆ ವರದಿ ಮಾಡಿದೆ. ಮೃತ ಪಟ್ಟ ಇಬ್ಬರು ಗುಜರಾತ್ ಮೂಲದವರು ಎಂದು ಗುರುತಿಸಲಾಗಿದೆ.

    ಟೈಮ್ಸ್ ಆಫ್ ಇಂಡಿಯಾ ವರದಿ ಪ್ರಕಾರ ಆರು ಜನ ಸಾವನ್ನಪ್ಪಿದ್ದು, ಯಾತ್ರಾರ್ಥಿಗಳು ತೆರಳುತ್ತಿದ್ದ ಬಸ್ಸಿನ ಮೇಲೆ ಮನಬಂದಂತೆ ಫೈರಿಂಗ್ ನಡೆಸಿ, ಉಗ್ರರು ಪರಾರಿಯಾಗಿದ್ದಾರೆ.


    ಘಟನಾ ಸ್ಥಳವನ್ನು ಸೇನೆ ಸುತ್ತುವರಿದಿದೆ ಎಂದು ವರದಿಯಾಗಿದೆ. ಜಮ್ಮು ಮತ್ತು ಕಾಶ್ಮೀರದ ಅನಂತನಾಗ್ ಜಿಲ್ಲೆಯ ಬಟೆನ್ಗೋ ಎನ್ನುವಲ್ಲಿ ಈ ಘಟನೆ ನಡೆದಿದೆ. ಹದಿನೇಳು ಯಾತ್ರಾರ್ಥಿಗಳು ಬಸ್ಸಿನಲ್ಲಿ ಪ್ರಯಾಣಿಸುತ್ತಿದ್ದರು.


    ಕೇಂದ್ರ ಗೃಹಸಚಿವ ರಾಜನಾಥ್ ಸಿಂಗ್, ಜಮ್ಮು ಮತ್ತು ಕಾಶ್ಮೀರದ ರಾಜ್ಯಪಾಲರ ಜೊತೆ ದೂರವಾಣಿ ಸಂಪರ್ಕದಲ್ಲಿದ್ದು ವಿಸ್ಕೃತ ಚರ್ಚೆ ನಡೆಸಿದ್ದಾರೆ.

    A group of heavily armed terrorists on Monday (Jul 10) attacked Amarnath pilgrims in Batengoo area of Jammu and Kashmir’s Anantnag district, according to reports.

  • RBI lifts restrictions on withdrawals from ATMs, current accounts

    In a big relief to people and small businesses, RBI today announced lifting of restrictions on daily withdrawal of money from ATMs and from current accounts but the weekly limit of Rs 24,000 on savings bank accounts will continue.



    The Reserve Bank also promised to review the weekly limit in the near future depending on the pace of remonetisation.


    “On a review of the pace of remonetisation, it has been decided to partially restore status quo ante,” RBI said adding, cash withdrawal limit from ATMs stands withdrawn from February 1, 2017.


    Banks, however, have been asked to fix their own limits, as has been the case before November 8, 2016, the day government scrapped high denomination currency notes of Rs 500 and 1,000.


    RBI has also removed all limits on cash withdrawals from current accounts/ cash credit accounts/ overdraft accounts with immediate effect.


    “The limits on Savings Bank accounts will continue for the present and are under consideration for withdrawal in the near future,” it said.


    It further said that banks have been “urged to encourage their constituents to sustain the movement towards digitisation of payments and switching over of payments from cash mode to non-cash mode.”


    Government and RBI had imposed limits on withdrawal of money from ATMs and bank branches in view of currency shortage following demonetisation.


    These limits, however, were gradually eased with RBI pumping in new notes of Rs 500 and Rs 2000.


    -PTI

  • Gangolli News wishes everybody a Happy 68th Republic Day

    Gangolli News wishes everybody a Happy 68th Republic Day,

    Republic Day of India is celebrated annually on 26th of January since 1950. It is celebrated by the Indian people all over the India to honor and remember the date on which Indian Constitution came into force.

    The Constitution of India was adopted on 26th of November in 1949 by the Constituent Assembly. 


    However, it came into effect on 26th of January in 1950. On the same date, the Government of India Act (1935) was replaced as the governing document of India. The Constitution of India came into force with a democratic government system.

    This date was chosen to adopt the Indian Constitution as Declaration of Indian Independence (means Purna Swaraj) was declared by the Indian National Congress in 1930. Republic Day is a national holiday in India which means a lot to the people of India.