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Violent clashes broke out between two student groups outside Ramjas College, leaving many injured on Wednesday – a day after the ABVP forced the suspension of a conference ‘Cultures of Protest’ where JNU student Umar Khalid was scheduled to speak.
The students had taken out the march to protest the violence displayed by the ABVP members earlier on Tuesday, during the conference.
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Not believing the claims that a State Bank of India ATM in South Delhi had dispensed bogus notes proved costly for Delhi Police sub-inspector Saurabh Kumar.
The policeman swiped his own card at the ATM to check whether the complainant, Rohit, was telling the truth. In the process, he too received a similar note, losing Rs 2,000 from his account for the time-being.
When the guard deployed at the ATM booth refused to believe that the bogus notes were dispensed by the ATM, Rohit dialled 100 to seek police’s help.
(Source: Hindustan Times)
Bharatiya Janata Party President Amit Shah on Wednesday urged people to get rid of ‘KASAB’ for the betterment of the state.
Addressing a rally in poll-bound Uttar Pradesh’s Chauri Chaura, Shah took a potshot at Samajwadi party, Bahujan Samaj Party and Congress saying, “If you want UP to become a developed state, then you have to get mukti from KASAB.”
He further said, “They will ask your religion & caste first, if that doesn’t seem favourable to them, they won’t give you laptop.”
Meanwhile, Shah’s ‘KASAB’ remark drew sharp criticism from the Congress party. Reacting to Shah’s statement, senior Congress party leader Abhishek Manu Singhvi told news agency ANI: “Need to end acronyms. BJP’s repulsive thinking brought out... party’s communal mindset.”
(Source: Indian Express)
A case of mistaken identity has cost a promising cricketer dearly.
During the IPL auction on Monday, several newsfeeds named Harpreet as the cricketer who was arrested earlier in the day for driving his car straight to the platform of Andheri railway station in Mumbai.
The incorrect news updates were later corrected, but the damage was done.
(Source: Indian Express)
India on Wednesday dismissed China’s contention that it has not furnished enough evidence against Pakistan-based terrorist Masood Azhar, with foreign secretary S Jaishankar telling senior Chinese officials that the burden of proof is not on India.
China’s efforts to block moves to sanction Azhar at the UN, despite its “principled” stand on counter-terrorism, was a political decision, he said.
The international community is convinced of Azhar’s culpability and it was the US, the UK and France which had moved the latest proposal at the UN Security Council to get the Jaish-e-Mohammad chief proscribed, he added.
(Source: Hindustan Times)
More than six months after ex-Arunachal CM Kalikho Pul committed suicide, leaving behind a 60-page signed note, the Supreme Court decided to hear on Thursday a complaint by his widow Dangwimsai Pul seeking a CBI probe into his charge of bribery against politicians and judges.
A bench of Justices Adarsh K Goel and UU Lalit is scheduled to hear Dangwimsai's complaint to Chief Justice of India JS Khehar alleging that the Arunachal police had brushed under the carpet serious allegations of corruption against important politicians and SC judges.
She had demanded an impartial probe into the allegations levelled in the suicide note, either by the CBI or the National Investigation Agency.
(Source: The Times of India)
A CBI court sentenced four policemen to life in jail till death for a staged 'encounter' in which they killed four daily wagers two days before Diwali in 1996.
The cops had said they were dreaded gangsters who were sitting near Machri roundabout in Bhojpur under suspicious circumstances and when challenged, started firing, forcing police to return fire in which all four were killed.
Following outrage over the incident, local residents and family members of the victims began an agitation and eventually the case was handed over to the CBI on 1 February 1997. After 20 years, a Ghaziabad CBI court on 20 February held the four cops guilty.
(Source: The Times of India)
Human rights breaches in Jammu & Kashmir should be settled through domestic Indian institutions, said David McAllister, who is leading a delegation of MEPs from European parliament's powerful foreign affairs committee.
The group consisting of Zeljana Zovko (Croatia), Cristian Dan Preda (Romania), David McAllister (Germany) and Urmas Paet (Estonia) had initially included Amjad Bashir, Pakistan-origin British MEP from Yorkshire, and a well-known critic of India. However, while four of the EU delegation arrived in New Delhi, Bashir was reportedly denied a visa by the Indian government.
(Source: The Times of India)
Astronomers have found a nearby solar system with seven Earth-sized planets, three of which circle their parent star at the right distance for liquid surface water, raising the prospect of life, research published on Wednesday showed.
It is located about 40 light years away from Earth. Researchers said the proximity of the system, combined with the proportionally large size of its planets compared to the small star, make it a good target for follow-up studies. They hope to scan the planets' atmospheres for possible chemical fingerprints of life.
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