Tag: India

  • 16-year-old girl gang-raped, set ablaze

    16-year-old girl gang-raped, set ablaze

    A 16-year-old Indian girl allegedly gang-raped and set on fire by two men has died in hospital, police told AFP Tuesday.

    The girl was a Dalit, the lowest rung in the Hindu caste system who suffer disproportionately high levels of sexual violence in a country with high rates of crime against women.

    Her death on Monday came less than a week after two Dalit sisters, aged 15 and 17, were found hanging from a tree after being allegedly sexually assaulted and murdered by six men.

    Both incidents took place in the poor northern state of Uttar Pradesh, home to about 230 million people, where similar crimes regularly make headlines.

    In the latest case, the girl from a rural area was allegedly attacked by two men and set on fire early this month.

    She was shifted to a hospital in the state capital Lucknow where she succumbed to her injuries on Monday.

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    “We arrested the accused within two hours of the incident being reported and assured the family of proper follow-up action against the perpetrators,” local police chief Dinesh Kumar Prabhu told AFP.

    In previous cases, low-caste families have been threatened or attacked to stop them from testifying.

    Activists say police often fail to take seriously accusations made by the marginalised community and that they lack recourse to legal representation.

    Last year the Uttar Pradesh authorities’ swift cremation before an autopsy of a Dalit rape victim murdered by an upper-caste Hindu man triggered widespread outrage.

    Nearly 32,000 cases of rape were reported in India in 2021, according to government figures, but many more are thought to go unreported.

  • Commonwealth Games: India cause pain for Nigeria’s table tennis team

    Commonwealth Games: India cause pain for Nigeria’s table tennis team

    India has defeated Nigeria by a 3-0  margin to reach another Commonwealth Games doubles final.

    Meanwhile, another  Indian  Sharath Kamal defeated world number 15, Aruna Quadri in the Men’s single competition.

    G Sathiyan and Harmeet Desai defeated Olajide Omotayo and Abiodun Bode in the opening doubles match in straight games. Then, the 40-year-old Sharath cruised past  Quadri in the important second singles encounter to give India a significant advantage.

    He defeated Quadri by 11-9, 7-11, 11-8, and 15-13 to progress in the competition.

    At the NEC arena, the fourth match ended up being the most entertaining. Everyone was on the edge of their seats throughout the long, rapid rallies. Late in the contest, Quadri won the greatest rally (19 shots) by a score of 9-8. By using the body smash, Sharath was able to tie the game at ten. Despite Quadri’s successful backhand, the Indian had the last laugh.

    Sathiyan, the highest-ranked player from India, eventually defeated Omotayo 11-9, 4-11, 11-6, and 11-8 to seal Nigeria’s defeat at the hands of India.

    Team Nigeria will take on England in the third-place match at the NEC 3 court. Team India will also face Singapore in the final after the third-place game.

  • IT firm, Zoho opens office in Nigeria to help small businesses

    An IT support firm, based in Tamil Nadu, India, Zoho Global Technology Company, has opened its office in Nigeria.

    The opening of Zoho’s office in Nigeria coincided with the launching of a platform by the IT firm to help small businesses transform digitally.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the platform is tagged: Zoho Africa Digital Enabler.

    Zoho’s President, Mr Hyther Nizam said the company would want to explore the numerous resources in  Nigeria because the country was the fastest growing digital economy in Africa.

    According to him, Zoho Africa Digital Enabler is to help small businesses with up to five employees jump start their digital journey.

    He said that the package would help new users of Zoho with a collection of 10 leading apps, starting from July 1, for a period of three months:

    “Zoho Workplace is a unified platform that brings together collaboration, productivity, and communications tools and integrates them into other business processes,” he said.

    He said other units in the platform included, Zoho Mail, team chat (Zoho Cliq), online office suite (Zoho Writer), among others.

    He said the Zoho Workplace was the most popular in Nigeria because it featured eight integrated apps that a hybrid team could deploy to get a job done in a short time.

    Nizam said that Bigin, a pipeline-centric CRM, was designed specifically to help businesses keep track of their customers and improve customer relationships without having to worry about high costs or complicated features.

    The president said the platform could help businesses avoid cost fluctuations due to changing dollar value, which would be beneficial in the current turbulent economy.

    ”We hope that Nigerian businesses will avail this plan and fast-track their growth by leveraging cloud technology.”

    “Cooperate social responsibility is rooted in the organisation and will support the government by giving  back to the society.

    He said that the platform could be reached through: https://zoho.to/ZADE.

  • 9 pilots, 32 cabin crew suspended over alcohol test

    9 pilots, 32 cabin crew suspended over alcohol test

    India’s Directorate-General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has suspended nine pilots and 32 cabin crew members for testing positive during their pre-flight alcohol tests.

    The tests were conducted between Jan. 1 and April 30.

    According to India’s civil aviation watchdog breather analyzer data, the affected personnel include one pilot and five cabin crew members of Go Air, four pilots and 10 cabin crew members of IndiGo.

    It said one pilot and six cabin crew members of Spice Jet, one pilot of Air India Express, four crew members of Air Asia, failed the pre-flight alcohol tests.

    It listed others as one pilot and two cabin crew members of Vistara, one pilot of Alliance Air and five crew members of Air India.

    The remaining seven pilots and 30 cabin-crew members tested BA positive for the first time, and were suspended for three months, the aviation regulator said.

    Before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, all crew members were required to undergo pre-flight alcohol tests.

    However, when the pandemic struck, the tests were suspended for a couple of months. The tests were resumed subsequently after the withdrawal of restrictions.

    In April, the DGCA restrained 90 pilots of SpiceJet airline from operating Boeing 737 Max aircraft on finding them not properly trained.

    Reports said the aviation watchdog has asserted that airlines must ensure that 50 per cent of their cockpit and cabin crew members are subject to pre-flight alcohol tests on a daily basis.

  • India police nab six Nigerians over murder case in Mumbai

    India police nab six Nigerians over murder case in Mumbai

    The Police in India have arrested six Nigerians in connection with a murder case in Mumbai.

    The men were arrested on May 6 in the Ri-Bhoi district of Lad Umsaw, in the northeastern state of Meghalaya.

     

    Two others were apprehended for alleged drug dealing in another Indian state.

     

    According to Meghalaya Police, the six are wanted in connection with a case registered with Waliv Police Station under sections 302/364/201/323/143/147/149 of the Indian Penal Code.

     

    It was alleged that the men were attempting to flee to Bangladesh, via Dawki in the West Jaintia Hills district, following a manhunt for them in India.

     

    The Meghalaya Police stated this in a post on its Twitter feed.

     

    “Yet another successful Inter-State Police coordination! After being alerted by @MumbaiPolice about the movement of some Nigerian Nationals wanted for a murder case in Mumbai, an operation was launched & 6 Nigerian Nationals were apprehended at Lad Umsaw, Ri-Bhoi.

     

    “It is learnt that the following Nigerian Nationals after committing the offence in Mumbai were intending to flee India to Bangladesh through Dawki India,” it tweeted.

     

     

    The suspects were identified as Eze Christopher Oba, Ahukanna Chinonso, Obi Francis Osita, Okoro Kelvin Chidozie, Emmanuel Agbeyi and Osagiede Godstime.

     

    TheNewsGuru.com gathered that two more Nigerians were also arrested in India in connection with drug dealing.

     

    The duo –Ifeanyi Charles Okuakaj and Emmanuel Enuma Dike – were nabbed in the city of Guwahati, Assam State.

     

    Their arrest followed an investigation by the Guwahati Police into an international drug trafficking racket which unearthed clues about drug shipment routes to Assam from neighbouring Indian states and countries.

     

    Okuakaj and Dike were said to have been apprehended at the Guwahati Railway Station while travelling by the Dibrugarh-bound Rajdhani Express.

     

    According to Guwahati Police, they were found with 20 grammes of cocaine, Aadhar cards and PAN cards registered to an address in Delhi.

     

    It was claimed that they entered India from Bangladesh through the Dawki border in Meghalaya. They came to Guwahati and then Delhi, before returning to Guwahati with a plan to return to Bangladesh.

     

    The police claimed that the duo’s arrest proved the presence of a ‘cartel smuggling cocaine to Guwahati and other states of the Northeast from Guwahati’.

  • Sleep-walking into universal disaster – By Owei Lakemfa

    Sleep-walking into universal disaster – By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

    THE siamese twins, India and Pakistan, have virtually been at each other’s throats since the 1947 surgical operation by quack British doctors that separated them.

    Their last dogfight in the skies was in 2019. However, on March 9, 2022, Pakistan with 165 nuclear warheads and India with 156, we’re almost at war. What nearly resulted in conflict was not their fierce differences over Kashmir or any difference for that matter.

    What happened was that India fired a BrahMos Medium range missile into Pakistan’s Punjab Province damaging property. But luckily, no aircraft were flying around and there were no casualties.

    The baffled Pakistanis who traced the missile launch were not sure what to make of it as it was an unarmed supersonic missile. They waited for the direct hotline between the two military chiefs to ring and get an explanation.

    But it remained silent. As the Pakistanis prepared for a possible conflict, they made a complaint to India. That was when two days later, the explanation came with profuse apologies; the Indian Air Force was checking its systems when due to a technical malfunction, the missile went off.

    Pakistan’s National Security Adviser, Moeed Yusuf said: “This missile travelled close to the path of international and domestic commercial airlines and threatened the safety of civilians…It is also highly irresponsible of Indian authorities not to have informed Pakistan immediately that an inadvertent launch of a cruise missile had taken place.”

    With the world saturated by missiles and nuclear arms, it is not impossible that any can be fired due to technical or human errors; in other words, humans can simply sleepwalk into a universal disaster. I often hear an exclamation like: ‘The Devil is a liar’; but in reality, the Devil is a realist; the best way to avoid a nuclear disaster is to rid the world of nuclear weapons. Africans say, you do not go about sniffing what you forbid; if we do not want a biological or nuclear war, why do we go about producing them?

    The United Nations in Article I of its Convention on the Prohibition of Bacteriological and Toxin Weapons, states that: “Each State Party to this Convention undertakes never in any circumstances to develop, produce, stockpile or otherwise acquire or retain microbial or other biological agents, or toxins whatever their origin or method of production, of types and in quantities…” But the issue of biological weapons production is the basis of the current claims and counterclaims in the ongoing Ukrainian war in which Russia on March 6, 2022, announced it had uncovered and captured a number of laboratories where Ukraine, with the aid of the United States, was engaged in the development of biological weapons.

    Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova announced they had discovered that: “Components of biological weapons were being developed in Ukrainian laboratories in direct proximity to Russian territory…During the special military operation in Ukraine, the Kyiv regime was found to have been concealing traces of a military biological programme implemented with funding from the United States Department of Defence”. She also claimed that Russia found messages directing Ukrainian bio-laboratory staff to eradicate “hazardous pathogens of plague, anthrax, rabbit-fever, cholera and other lethal diseases(from) stored reserves of highly hazardous pathogens”.

    The US which before the United Nations vehemently denied the accusations, however, did not accuse the Russians of planting the laboratories nor that American instructions to the Ukrainians to eradicate the hazardous pathogens rather than let them fall into Russian hands are fake.

    The American position was made more problematic when its embassy in Ukraine issued a statement titled: ‘Biological Threat Reduction Program’. In reference to the Russian discoveries, the US Embassy said America “collaborates with partner countries to counter the threat of outbreaks (deliberate, accidental, or natural) of the world’s most dangerous infectious diseases”. The American statement went on to state that: “The Biological Threat Reduction Program’s priorities in Ukraine are to consolidate and secure pathogens and toxins of security concern…”

    When the matter came up in the American Senate, the US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Victoria Nuland admitted: “Ukraine has biological-research facilities, which, in fact, we are now quite concerned Russian forces may be seeking to gain control of. So we are working with the Ukrainians on how they can prevent any of those research materials from falling into the hands of Russian forces, should they approach.”

    My concerns are not whether or not the Ukrainian laboratory experiments are for defensive purposes -whatever that means -but that, as it happened in the Indian missile case, there can be accidental discharge or leakage, and before you know it, the world might be battling new pandemics.

    This is also my concern on whether the war in Ukraine might involve the eventual use of nuclear weapons by either Russia or the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, NATO. It may not be deliberate, but human errors like that that happened in the case of Indians can occur. Famous scientist Albert Einstein who initially thought the atomic bomb was a good idea, changed his mind, famously saying: “Mankind invented the atomic bomb, but no mouse would ever construct a mousetrap.” His conclusion was that: “To have security against atomic bombs and against the other biological weapons, we have to prevent war, for if we cannot prevent war every nation will use every means that is at their disposal; and in spite of all promises they make, they will do it.”

    After the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, humanity swore it must never be repeated. That was in 1945. But nuclear weapons increased to 3,000 in 1955 and to over 37,000 by 1965 (US, 31,000 and the Soviet Union 6,000). At this point, there were demands that nuclear weapons should first be drastically reduced, then eliminated.

    This was one of the hopes in the negotiations of the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty, SALT I signed in 1972. But rather than reduce, there was further proliferation to the extent that they rose to 47,000 by 1975 (US, 27,000 and Soviet Union 20,000) then to 70,300 active weapons in 1986.

    The figures have reduced significantly, but remain very high, with Russia in 2022 having 6,255 nuclear warheads; the US: 5,550; China with 350; France: 290 and United Kingdom: 225 nuclear warheads. Other known nuclear countries are Israel and North Korea. There are others in the queue.

    Despite threats, I am not sure nuclear-proliferating countries can stop others from joining the race; so there is a balance of terror. Yet, humanity and nuclear weapons cannot co-exist; one will have to give way to the other. The way out is decommissioning all nuclear weapons; but will the powerful agree to give up their lethal weapons? I doubt it.

  • India suspends international flights till further notice

    India suspends international flights till further notice

    Commercial international flights to and from India shall remain suspended until further orders, officials said Monday.

    According to a circular issued by the country’s civil aviation Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Monday, the restriction shall not be applicable for international all-cargo operations and flights specifically approved by DGCA.

    “The competent authority has decided to extend the suspension of scheduled international commercial passenger services to and from India till further orders.

    “However, flights under air bubble arrangement will not be affected.”

    Commercial flights were suspended when the country imposed a complete nationwide lockdown late in March 2020 to contain the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Domestic flights resumed operations in India on May 25, 2020, after nearly two months of suspension while international flights continue to remain suspended.

    Meanwhile, Indian authorities have been operating special international flights since May 2020 and under bilateral “air bubble” arrangements with select countries since July 2021.

  • Ini Edo seeks support for baby born without eyes [VIDEO]

    Ini Edo seeks support for baby born without eyes [VIDEO]

    Veteran Nollywood actress, Ini Edo has launched a fundraising campaign to support a baby who was born without eyes.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Ini Edo is seeking support to the tune of N6 million to help the baby regain her sight through surgery in India.

    Ini Edo was distressed when she saw the video of the baby born without any traces of eyes.

    The actress stated that some people are simply blessed by God because their offspring are still alive and unaffected by defections.

    The baby’s abnormality was classified as “Anophthalmia,” a birth abnormality in which a baby is born with one or both eyes non-existent.

    She further stated that some series of test carried out on the baby has revealed that the newborn has eyes but would need surgery for her to see.

    According to Ini, the surgery will be performed in three stages: the outer false opening, the eyeballs, and the correction surgery, all of which will take place in India.

    Ini Edo also disclosed that the procedure is expected to cost N6,000,000, and she is appealing to generous Nigerians to help with donations to help raise the funds.

    Ini Edo wrote: “This baby is just 30 days old born with no traces of eyes called anophthalmia, a birth defect where a baby is born without one or both eyes.

    “Series of test and scan discover that the baby is having eyes, but will need to undergo some surgeries which includes, the outer flesh opening, the eyeball opening and corrective surgery which will be done in India.

    “Estimated surgery Bill is NGN6,000,000.00 (6 million naira). Please, we are all seeking your help and support on this 30 days old baby”.

     

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    A post shared by Ini Edo (@iniedo)

  • After repeatedly raping a nun, court sets Catholic Bishop free

    After repeatedly raping a nun, court sets Catholic Bishop free

    An Indian court has acquitted a Catholic bishop who was charged with raping a nun in a case that sparked widespread outrage and protests.

    Bishop Franco Mulakkal, 54, was acquitted by a court in the southern Indian state of Kerala on Friday, which said the prosecution had failed to prove any of the charges against him.

    The nun, whose identity is protected under Indian law, had alleged that Mulakkal, who was the bishop of a diocese in Jalandhar in the northern state of Punjab at the time, raped her 13 times between 2014 and 2016 when he would visit the convent where she lived in southern state of Kerala.

    The convent, Missionaries of Jesus, is part of the Jalandhar diocese. The nun faced “harassment” and “threats” from the bishop for two years in a bid to keep her silent about the alleged rape, but she “finally gathered courage in 2016” to come forward, she told CBS News in an off-camera interview in 2019.

    The Vatican did not immediately reply on Friday to CBS News’ request for comment on the case.

    Her allegations against the bishop became public in 2018, when she petitioned the Vatican and wrote an open letter to Pope Francis’ representative in the Indian capital of Delhi. When her story emerged, it led to major protests led by a group of nuns supporting her, as well as activists who added their voices to demands for justice and the arrest of the bishop. He was arrested later that year.

    Five nuns, close associates of the woman who alleged the rapes, accused the church in Kerala of ignoring the allegations and instead pressuring them to withdraw the case.

    “Father James Erthayil offered 10 acres of land and a separate convent for six of us if we withdrew the case,” Sister Neena Rose, a close associate of the nun who made the rape allegations, told CBS News in 2019. She said someone had offered the purported rape survivor $675,000 to keep quiet.

    The nuns even wrote to Pope Francis directly in 2019, when he was hosting a landmark summit on clergy sex abuse, but they say their letters have never been answered.

    “At least the pope should see our tears,” Sister Alphy Pallasseril, one of the five nuns publicly supporting the claimant, told CBS News in an emotionally charged interview in 2019. “We have no words to say how much we are suffering.”

    Pallasseril, along with the other nuns who participated in the protests, later faced harassment including threats of disciplinary action, transfers and expulsion from the congregation, they told CBS News.

    The bishop’s acquittal surprised the nuns, and the lawyers fighting the case.

    “We would definitely challenge the verdict in a higher court after going through the order in detail,” Special Public Prosecutor Jithesh J. Babu told CBS News on Friday.

    “The verdict is shocking, the victim has been denied justice, but we take it as a challenge,” Sister Lucy Kalappura, another close associate of the nun in question, told CBS News. “We are all with our sister to support her… this is just a step in the legal process, we will fight the case in a higher court.”

    Kalappura was expelled from the Franciscan Clarist Congregation (FCC) of Kerala in 2019.

    Indian TV showed the bishop smiling as he walked out of the court in Kerala state on Friday. His legal team told CBS News partner network BBC News that it had “shattered the entire evidence” against him.

  • Indian contestant wins Miss Universe 2021 pageant

    Indian contestant wins Miss Universe 2021 pageant

    Miss India, 21-year-old actress Harnaaz Sandhu, was crowned Miss Universe early Monday in a live show in the Israeli coastal city of Eilat on the Red Sea.

    Sandhu prevailed against 79 competitors from countries around the world.

    In a profile on the pageant website, the winner is described as “a strong advocate for women’s empowerment, particularly constitutional rights to education, careers and freedom of choice.”

    In her free time, the 21-year-old likes to dance, do yoga, cook, ride horses and play chess.

    According to her, her mother, a successful gynaecologist and the head of her family and Indian star actress Priyanka Chopra Jonas are her inspiration.

    It was the 70th Miss Universe pageant, the event began at 3 am (0100 GMT) in order to be broadcast live in prime time on U.S. television.

    Because of the Coronavirus pandemic, only viewers with a “green pass,” showing they had either recovered from the Coronavirus or had been vaccinated in the last six months, could be present at the show.

    Earlier in May, a 26-year-old, Andrea Meza from Mexico won the title of Miss Universe 2020 in the U.S. state of Florida.

    Meza placed a silver tiara on winner Sandhu’s head symbolising her win.

    A total of 80 women had started out running in the Miss Universe pageant final but South Africa withdrew support for its own candidate.

    According to the organisers, a candidate from the United Arab Emirates entered the competition for the first time this year.

    In addition, for the first time in more than four decades there was a candidate from Morocco.

    The 2020 competition had been postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.