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TRINAMOOL CONGRESS WILL TEST ITS STRENGTH IN SIX BYPOLLS IN BENGAL ON NOVEMBER 13

BJP AND LEFT ARE HOPING FOR GETTING SOME POLITICAL MILEAGE OUT OF R G KAR DOCTORS MOVEMENT
Tirthankar Mitra - 2024-10-24 12:40
With less than three weeks to go before November 13 when six Assembly segments will witness by-elections in West Bengal, the principal Opposition outfit BJP does not seem to have got its act together yet though they are contesting in all six constituencies. It applies equally to Left Front and the Congress as these Opposition outfits with no member in the assembly, condemned the incident of rape and murder of the woman doctor at RG Kar Medical College and Hospital in one voice thereby bringing themselves to the public eye as big supporters of the 71 day old doctors movement in the state.

INDIAN RAILWAYS FOR ONION TRANSPORT AMID FOCUS ON PRICE STABILISATION

ELECTRIC MOBILITY IS ONE OF THE MOST EFFECTIVE SOLUTION TO DECARBONISATION
Arun Kumar Shrivastav - 2024-10-24 12:33
Recently, the Indian government's Department of Consumer Affairs announced that 1600 metric tons of onions procured by the National Cooperative Consumers Federation of India Ltd was shipped by the railway from Nashik to Delhi. The quantity of 42 BCN (Bogie Covered New) was enough to fill 53 trucks. The initiative was taken under the price stabilisation fund, and it's the first time that onions were transported in bulk by railway under this programme. The shipment was expected to reach Delhi on October 20 and be released in Delhi-NCR, increasing the availability of onions in the market and stabilising the price in the festive season.

FOR CUBA, U.S. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS HAVE MAJOR CONSEQUENCES ON ECONOMY

TRUMP, IF ELECTED, MAY IMPOSE MORE SANCTIONS AS HE DID IN HIS FIRST TERM
W. T. Whitney Jr. and Emile Schepers - 2024-10-24 12:30
NEW YORK: At the end of October, the United Nations General Assembly, for the 32nd consecutive year, will be voting on a resolution submitted by Cuba claiming “the necessity to put an end to the economic, commercial, and financial blockade imposed by the United States of America against Cuba.” As they do every year, the delegates will most likely approve the resolution overwhelmingly.

LADY JUSTICE STATUE MAKE OVER IN APEX COURT LIBRARY HAS RSS IMPRINT

M.Y. Siddiqui - 2024-10-24 05:53
Recent unveiling of a changed Lady Justice statue in the Supreme Court of India by the Chief Justice of India Justice D.Y. Chandrachud, traditionally depicted with a blind fold and a sword, now opens with eyes wide open, holding the Constitution of India in place of a sword. However, the scale of justice remains as usual. While inaugurating it, Justice Chandrachud said, “Law is not blind. Justice sees everybody equally," critics see in it a linkage with RSS ideology.

WITH A REVIEW PENDING, SUPREME COURT HARDENS STAND AGAINST ENFORCEMENT DIRECTORATE

AGENCY WARNED AGAINST VIOLATION OF CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS OF PMLA ACCUSED
K Raveendran - 2024-10-23 11:44
Successive pronouncements by the Supreme Court have revealed a growing judicial sense against the potential for abuse in the draconian anti- money laundering laws. This has an important bearing on the pending petitions for the review of the apex courts verdict in the 2022 verdict by a three-member bench upholding all the provisions of the controversial Prevention of Money Laundering Act.

SUPREME COURT JUDGMENT ON SUPPLY OF ARMS TO ISRAEL CASE IS FLAWED

THE LEARNED JUDGES MISSED THE HUMAN ELEMENT AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
Aman Kumar - 2024-10-23 11:41
In 2019, M.K. Ranjitsinh Jhala, the renowned wildlife conservationist, joined hands with other conservationists to file a writ petition before the Supreme Court of India (SC) against the government of India regarding the protection of the great Indian bustard. They argued that the overhead transmission lines used for the supply of electricity generated through wind and solar energy resulted in the loss of the population of the great Indian bustard in Gujarat and Rajasthan.

DELHI FALLS INTO RED ZONE, SEVERE AIR POLLUTION SPREADS

SUPREME COURT PULLS UP CENTRE FOR ‘TOOTHLESS’ LAWS
Dr. Gyan Pathak - 2024-10-23 11:38
People of India’s National Capital Delhi rose to see the city covered is such a suffocating thick layer of smog that almost all weather-monitoring stations fell into red zone in the morning on October 23, 2024. With it more areas moved into severe level of air pollution. By noon, the Supreme Court of India pulled up Centre for framing ‘toothless’ environmental laws, apart from criticizing Haryana and Punjab for failing to control stubble burning, one of the chief causes of yearly worsening of air pollution in Delhi.

NINE DAY INDIA FESTIVAL GETTING HUGE RESPONSE IN RIYADH

BIG STEPS TAKEN TO IMPROVE RELATIONS BERWEEN INDIA AND SAUDI ARABIA
Pradeep Kapoor - 2024-10-23 11:34
RIYADH: The nine-day India festival organised here by the Ministry of Media under it's Global Harmony Initiative will strengthen relations between India and Saudi Arabia.

CENTRE IS FINDING IT DIFFICULT TO WORK OUT AN ACCEPTABLE PEACE FORMULA FOR MANIPUR

CHIEF MINISTER N BIREN SINGH HAS LOST CONFIDENCE OF ALL STAKE HOLDERS INCLUDING BJP
Rabindra Nath Sinha - 2024-10-22 11:57
KOLKATA: “We have no inhibition in socialising over a bowl of soup or a cup of tea or coffee; but thereafter it is ‘thus far and no further for us’. We have our long-standing demands and we are firm on pursuing those”, important Kuki and Naga leaders told IPA when asked about the meeting the Union home ministry held in New Delhi on Tuesday, October 15 with Manipur MLAs representing the Kuki-Zo-Hmar, Meitei and Naga communities in the strife-torn state. The brief statement of the ministry on the meeting called it a quest for peace but it was very economical on details. The statement was silent on the absence of chief minister N Biren Singh from the meeting.

POLITICAL INSTABILITY AND FLOODS INCREASE BANGLADESH’S ECONOMIC WOES

READYMADE GARMENT INDUSTRY IS WORST AFFECTED LEADING TO FALL IN EXPORTS
Arun Kumar Shrivastav - 2024-10-22 11:54
Months of unrest and violence leading to change of the government in Bangladesh is still taking a toll on its economy and its geopolitical neutrality. Recent floods in August and October have further pushed the country to the wall, making food prices rise by 20% in recent months.