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Tension ran high at Banaras Hindu University in Varanasi on Sunday after an overnight police crackdown on students demonstrating against an alleged molestation on the campus and demanding bringing the culprits to justice.
“A lot of students arrived at the trauma centre and the situation is tense, but there are no major injuries,” a BHU hospital official said.
Source: Hindustan Times
Maleeha Lodhi, Pakistan’s permanent representative to the United Nations, was left red-faced on Sunday after she committed an embarrassing gaffe by labelling a picture taken from Gaza as the “face of Indian democracy”. Lodhi was attempting to counter India at the UN General Assembly, a day after External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj branded Pakistan as “preeminent export factory for terror”.
While exercising her right to reply, Lodhi flashed a picture of an injured Gaza woman, whose face was peppered with alleged pellet gun wounds. “This is the face of Indian democracy,” Lodhi claimed, alleging that the woman shown in the picture was a victim of pellet guns in Kashmir.
Source: The Indian Express
The body of senior journalist KJ Singh, who was found murdered in his house in Mohali on Saturday, bore 14-16 stab wounds, according to the report of a panel of doctors who conducted post-mortem in Mohali civil hospital.
The house of murdered journalist K J Singh was ransacked and gold ornaments that his 92-year-old mother used to wear are missing, police said on Sunday.
Source: The Times of India
At least two planes are struck every day in India by airborne birds or animals on runways, accidents that pose a serious risk to human lives and the aviation industry.
According to latest data obtained through the RTI law from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), more than 4,000 aircraft suffered wildlife strikes – hit by birds or animals – in about 80 airports over the past five years.
Such collisions increased substantially from 607 in 2012 to 839 in 2016.
Source: Hindustan Times
Contrary to public perception that the border standoff between India and China at Doklam involved a small number of troops, the Chinese had posted more than 12,000 soldiers, 150 tanks, and artillery guns opposite Sikkim at Phari Dzong in Chumbi Valley during the 73-day standoff, a new book has revealed.
Apart from a blow-by-blow account of the standoff, the book includes extensive quotes from National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, military chiefs and other senior Indian officials on Modi government’s approach to security issues. A chapter of the book, which will be released by Vice President Venkaiah Naidu in Delhi on Friday, was exclusively accessed by The Indian Express.
Source: The Indian Express
All-rounder Hardik Pandya rose to the occasion yet again with a fluent 78-run knock as India registered a comfortable five-wicket win over Australia in the third ODI to grab the number one spot, on Sunday.
Chasing 294 for a win, India overhauled the target with 13 balls to spare in front of a packed Holkar stadium to take a series-clinching 3-0 lead.
Source: The Times of India
Only two government school students have cleared NEET in Tamil Nadu in 2017 for admission to 2,503 MBBS seats in the state’s 22 government medical colleges. Last year, the figure was 30. Namakkal, a district with among the highest-scoring students in the state board exams, of which a large percentage get into professional courses, saw 109 students clear NEET, against 957 who got into medicine last year.
Source: The Indian Express
Pakistan PM Shahid Khaqan Abbasi last week yet again flaunted his country's tactical or nonstrategic nuclear weapons, saying they were meant to deter the Indian Army's 'cold start' doctrine.
According to a recent report by the Federation of American Scientists (FAS), Pakistan has stored its nuclear forces at nine different locations across the country.
Source: The Times of India
In another potential setback for Vijay Mallya, the CBI and Enforcement Directorate are preparing to chargesheet the controversial tycoon for allegedly diverting a large chunk of funds from the Rs 6,027-crore loan he took for his now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines from a consortium of banks led by State Bank of India.
CBI and ED sources claimed the evidence would strengthen their case for Mallya's extradition from the UK.
Source: The Times of India
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