Meghalaya districts ban sale, transport of 'illegally imported' fish from Bangladesh

Meghalaya districts ban sale, transport of 'illegally imported' fish from Bangladesh


Shillong, Authorities in Meghalaya have banned the transportation, storage and sale of fish ‘illegally imported’ from Bangladesh in at least two districts following reports of unregulated consignments entering the state through porous border routes, officials said on Monday.

Meghalaya districts ban sale, transport of ‘illegally imported’ fish from Bangladesh

East Khasi Hills and South West Khasi Hills districts have issued the ban citing concerns over public health and bio-security, they said.

In East Khasi Hills, the in-charge district magistrate issued a prohibitory order under Section 163 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita , 2023, stating that “the transportation, storage, sale or distribution of fish illegally imported from Bangladesh without valid legal documents is hereby prohibited within the jurisdiction of East Khasi Hills district.”

A similar order was also issued by South West Khasi Hills district deputy commissioner.

The order also prohibits “the use of any vehicle, vessel, boat or other conveyance, and assisting, harbouring or facilitating any individual or group involved in such illegal activities,” it said.

According to the order, reports have been received that “illegal transportation of fish from Bangladesh is taking place through various border routes, riverine channels, roads and market points within the state,” with the possibility of such consignments entering the district through multiple channels.

It said the illegal transportation and entry of unregulated fish violate customs, import-export and food safety regulations and “carry the potential of introducing diseased or restricted species.”

Warning of wider implications, the order noted that “the illegal, unchecked and uncertified sale and distribution of these foreign-origin fish pose a serious risk to public health and sanitation, negatively impact the bio-security of the local aquatic ecosystem and cause economic loss to legitimate fish traders and the state government.”

Any person found violating the order “shall be liable for action under Section 223 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita , 2023, and other relevant provisions of law including the Customs Act, the Foreigners Act and the Passport Act,” it said.

The prohibitory order has come into force with immediate effect and “shall remain in force until further orders,” the district administration added.

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Syria Kurds impose curfew in northeast cities before govt deal begins

Syria Kurds impose curfew in northeast cities before govt deal begins


Syrian Kurdish security forces on Sunday announced a curfew early next week in two cities in the country’s northeast, ahead of the implementation of a recent deal struck with the Islamist-led government in Damascus.

Syria Kurds impose curfew in northeast cities before govt deal begins

Damascus and Kurdish forces reached a comprehensive agreement on Friday to gradually integrate the Kurds’ military and civilian institutions into the state, after the Kurds ceded territory to advancing government forces in recent weeks.

Mazloum Abdi, head of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, has said the deal would be implemented on the ground from Monday, with both sides to pull forces back from frontline positions in parts of the northeast, and from the town of Kobane in the north.

He said a “limited internal security force” would enter parts of Hasakeh and Qamishli but that “no military forces will enter any Kurdish city or town”.

Kurdish security forces announced a curfew in the northeastern city of Hasakeh from 6:00 am to 6:00 pm on Monday, and in the northeast’s main Kurdish city of Qamishli on Tuesday, during the same hours.

It said the move was “to maintain security, stability and the safety of residents”.

A source from the Kurds’ security forces said a government security delegation visited its headquarters in Qamishli on Sunday.

The text of Friday’s deal maintains an ongoing ceasefire and introduces a “gradual integration” of the Kurdish forces and administrative institutions.

It appeared to include some of the Kurds’ demands, such as establishing brigades of fighters from the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in Kurdish-majority areas.

The government’s push to extend its authority across the country was a blow to the Kurds.

They had sought to preserve the de facto autonomy they exercised after seizing swathes of north and northeast Syria in battles against the Islamic State jihadist group during Syria’s civil war, backed by a US-led coalition.

– ‘Protects us’ –

In Qamishli on Sunday, thousands of Kurdish men, women and children filled the streets in a show of solidarity, waving Kurdish flags and holding up pictures of fighters who were killed, an AFP correspondent said.

Student Barine Hamza, 18, said “we have come out for Kurdish unity”.

“We are afraid of being betrayed because we do not trust this government,” she said.

Housewife Nourshana Mohammed, 40, said that “the presence of the SDF is important for us. It protects us Kurds and saved us” from IS.

Information Minister Hamza Mustafa told state media on Friday that the agreement included the handover of some oil fields, the Qamishli airport and border crossings to the government within 10 days.

He said SDF fighters would be integrated on an individual basis into several brigades being formed under the army’s command.

The United States, which has drawn close to Syria’s new Islamist authorities, recently said the purpose of its alliance with the Kurdish forces was largely over.

Also on Sunday, the head of internal security in Aleppo province, Mohammed Abdul Ghani, told reporters he met with Kurdish forces in Kobane to discuss security matters there “and begin the deployment of interior ministry forces”, without announcing a timeframe.

He said technical details still needed to be settled, but that the response from the Kurdish side was “positive”.

Located in Aleppo province more than 200 kilometres from other Kurdish-held areas in Syria’s northeast, Kobane is hemmed in by the Turkish border to the north and Syrian government forces on other sides.

Kurdish forces liberated Kobane from a lengthy siege by IS in 2015 and it took on symbolic value as their first major victory against the jihadists.

On Saturday, NGOs and a Turkish MP said Turkish authorities had blocked a convoy carrying aid to Kobane from across the border.

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Vikram Bhatt, wife Shwetambari denied bail by Rajasthan High Court in  ₹30 crore fraud case; will remain in jail

Vikram Bhatt, wife Shwetambari denied bail by Rajasthan High Court in ₹30 crore fraud case; will remain in jail


Filmmaker Vikram Bhatt and his wife Shwetambari Bhatt were dealt a blow by the Rajasthan High Court on Saturday, after it rejected their bail applications in a cheating case. The two have been in jail since December 7, when they were arrested in Mumbai and brought to Udaipur.

Vikram Bhatt and his wife were arrested in Mumbai on December 7 and taken to Udaipur. (ANI Video Grab)

Vikram Bhatt, wife denied bail

While rejecting their bail, Justice Vinod Kumar Bharwani observed that granting bail to the accused at this stage would not be appropriate.

The Special Public Prosecutor (SPP) had opposed their bail, arguing that the investigation in the case and the accused, including the Bhatts, will be required for further interrogation. The SPP also said that if the applicants are released on bail at this stage, they may influence witnesses.

What is the case?

Vikram Bhatt was arrested in December after Indira IVF and Fertility Centre founder Ajay Murdia, a resident of Udaipur, filed a complaint of cheating and criminal breach of trust against the filmmaker, his wife Shwetambari Bhatt and others, alleging that funds taken in the name of a film project were misappropriated. The complaint has alleged that funds to the tune of 30 crore were misappropriated.

The complaint alleged that the Bhatts prepared fake bills under various names and got money transferred from the complainant. The money was supposed to be for making films for the complainant, but was allegedly deposited into the accused’s own accounts and used by them.

Apart from Vikram and his wife, Udaipur-based Dinesh Kataria and Bhatt’s manager, Mehboob Ansari, were also arrested by the Rajasthan Police on December 7.

Vikram Bhatt’s legal team has denied all allegations. According to ANI, Bhatt’s lawyer Kamlesh Dave had alleged that the entire police action was taken “based only on the FIR and not documents”.

“Every payment was made in the knowledge of both parties. There were no such fake or bogus bills. The agreement was done to make two films first and another two on rolling finance,” he had claimed.

Earlier, the court had rejected a petition from Vikram Bhatt seeking the quashing of the FIR, contending that the dispute was of a civil nature, not criminal. But the court noted that since the case also involved misappropriation of funds apart from breach of trust, therefore, the police investigation will continue.



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Kerala HC permits termination of over 31weeks old foetus suffering from abnormalities

Kerala HC permits termination of over 31weeks old foetus suffering from abnormalities


Kochi, The Kerala High Court has come to the aid of a couple seeking medical termination of their over 31 weeks old foetus, which suffers from congenital abnormalities of the brain and head, by allowing them to go ahead with the procedure.

Kerala HC permits termination of over 31weeks old foetus suffering from abnormalities

Justice Shoba Annamma Eapen allowed termination of the pregnancy on the basis of a medical board report which opined that if the baby is born, it would suffer from serious physical abnormalities.

The board had also opined that continuation of the pregnancy was likely to be associated with risk to her mental health.

The court, after considering the facts, materials on record, the settled principles of law on the subject and the recommendations of the medical board, was of the view that denying termination “may only delay the inevitable and extend the suffering of the family”.

It directed the Kottayam Medical College to terminate the pregnancy.

The court directed the medical college to take immediate measures to constitute a medical team to conduct the procedure.

“The medical team shall, in their discretion and best judgment, adopt the best procedure recommended in the medical science to terminate the pregnancy and save the life of the first petitioner ,” it said.

It directed that before carrying out the medical termination of pregnancy, the team shall reconfirm the foetal abnormalities by performing a final scan.

The court further said that if the foetus is born alive, “the hospital shall render all the necessary assistance, including incubation and treatment at any super-speciality, to ensure that the foetus survives”.

“The baby shall be offered the best medical treatment and the petitioners shall take full responsibility and bear the expenses for the baby,” it added.

The petitioners had contended that the foetus suffers from congenital abnormalities of the brain and head, including features suggestive of microcephaly, carrying a high likelihood of serious and lifelong physical and neurological disability.

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No death penalty for Luigi Mangione over United health insurance CEO murder

No death penalty for Luigi Mangione over United health insurance CEO murder


A US judge on Friday barred prosecutors from seeking the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the man accused of gunning down a health insurance CEO in New York in December 2024.

Mangione faces life in prison without parole if convicted of the stalking charges. The federal trial is to begin with jury selection on September 8. (Reuters)

The judge dismissed two charges against Mangione that could carry the death penalty: murder and using a gun with a silencer. The 27-year-old suspect is still charged with two counts of stalking in his federal case, and faces state-level murder charges.

Friday’s decision “is solely to foreclose the death penalty as an available punishment to be considered by the jury,” Judge Margaret Garnett wrote in a court filing.

Mangione faces life in prison without parole if convicted of the stalking charges. The federal trial is to begin with jury selection on September 8.

Also read: Man impersonating FBI agent tried to get Luigi Mangione out of jail, authorities say

The murder of United Healthcare executive Brian Thompson, captured on surveillance video, shocked the United States and exposed public anger with the profit-driven private healthcare system.

Mangione was arrested five days after the killing at a McDonald’s restaurant in Altoona, Pennsylvania, some 230 miles (370 kilometers) from the crime scene, following a tip from a staff member.

In another significant ruling Friday, Garnett rejected Mangione’s lawyers’ efforts to suppress as evidence the police search of a backpack recovered at the time of his arrest.

Also read: Luigi Mangione jail break: Who is mark Anderson? 5 things on suspect who tried to free UnitedHealthcare CEO killer

Inside, officers found a handgun, a silencer, a magazine with bullets wrapped in underwear and a red notebook described as a “manifesto.”

The defense argued the search breached legal standards. Mangione has pleaded not guilty to the state and federal charges.



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Eco Survey: India to grow by up to 7.2% next fiscal

Eco Survey: India to grow by up to 7.2% next fiscal


The Economic Survey, unlike the Union Budget which will be presented on Sunday, is not a binding document for the government. It is best read and understood as a glimpse into the overall philosophy which guides economic policy making of which the budget is just a part. And it is also the document that projects real growth; the budget usually doesn’t, although it does give a nominal growth projection. On that front, the Economic Survey 2025-26 has only good news: a 6.8-7.2% GDP growth in 2026-27, and an upward revision in India’s potential growth in the medium term from 6.5% to 7%.

Policy dynamism and purposeful, governance reinforce this backdrop” CEA V Anantha Nageswaran writes in his preface to the survey, (PTI)

Directionally, the economic survey calls for waking up and smelling the coffee rather than either patting oneself on the back or being unnecessary alarmist. The survey’s overall direction is best described by its clarion call for “strategic sobriety and not defensive pessimism” in a world which is expected to stay turbulent under the best assumptions in the foreseeable future.

Also Read | Economic survey: India to boost skilling, vocational training for Viksit Bharat 2047

That the survey has put a ship full of containers (read exports) on its cover while reviewing a year which saw India’s largest export market (US) impose 50% tariffs on it is a clear declaration of intent that the way forward will not be inward looking. That it explicitly states that “stability, prudence, and democratic legitimacy (on part of the state) remain indispensable, but they are no longer sufficient on their own”, and describes the year 2025 as marking a paradox where “India’s strongest macroeconomic performance in decades collided with a global system that no longer rewards macroeconomic success with currency stability, capital inflows, or strategic insulation”, is a clear admission that policies which were desirable and good for India’s economic aspirations in the past are not going to be enough in the future.

Juxtaposed with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s comments on Thursday, about India being on the “reforms express”, this suggests that the underlying theme of Union Budget 2026-27 could be radical reforms of the sort required to make India a developed nation (Viksit Bharat) by 2047. Indeed, almost every section of the economic survey ends with a note on what needs to be done in that area towards achieving this objective. Separate chapters on building institutional capacity, tapping AI, and building competitive cities emphasize the importance of these.

A strong economy…

The reason for this larger pivot is not adverse developments in the domestic economy. In fact, the survey consistently and comprehensively underlines what it sees as a structural and not merely a cyclical strengthening of the Indian economy over the past few years. It has made an upward revision of India’s potential growth from 6.5% to 7%. It has projected a real GDP growth rate of 6.8%-7.2% for 2026-27, where the outlook is “one of steady growth amid global uncertainty, requiring caution, but not pessimism”. “Growth is good; the outlook remains favourable; inflation is contained; rainfall and agricultural prospects are supportive; external liabilities are low; banks are healthy; liquidity conditions are comfortable; credit growth is respectable; corporate balance sheets are strong; and the overall flow of funds to the commercial sector is robust. Policy dynamism and purposeful, governance reinforce this backdrop” Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) V Anantha Nageswaran writes in his preface to the survey underlining the inherent strengths of the domestic economy.

The survey also highlights the reforms undertaken in the last year, which, it is not shy to admit, were catalysed by the “surprise” of the US imposing additional tariffs on Indian rather than the belief even within the government of India being “one of the early winners in the new tariff regime of the United States”. Among the key reforms it has flagged are things such as rationalisation of GST rates, implementation of labour codes, raising of FDI limits in sectors such as insurance and opening up of the nuclear power sector to foreign players.

To be sure, the survey gives anything but a sense of complacency on the reform front. “India’s most consequential constraint today is no longer the absence of policy intent, ideas, or resources, but the incentive structures within institutions that shape how decisions are taken under uncertainty”, it says, while asking for a radical change in how policy is made and implemented to create, what it has described as an entrepreneurial state. “Political leadership must set direction and articulate priorities. Bureaucracies must discover pathways, solve problems, and adapt instruments. Institutions must absorb error without collapsing into either paralysis or permissiveness” rather than a situation where “politicians drift into populism while bureaucracies drift into insularity, the survey describes as the ideal policy making apparatus.

Also Read | Economic survey flags social media addiction among India’s teens, youth: ‘Access no longer a constraint’

… but in an increasingly turbulent world

Where the survey clearly hands out a ‘’brace for impact “ warning is the external economic and geopolitical environment. Here the CEA only sees things as being as bad as they are (Scenario I), becoming worse (Scenario II) or mutating into a proverbial economic Armageddon of sorts (Scenario III). The third is just about half less likely (10-20% probability) than the first two (40-45% probability). Scenario I, the best-case assumption, has been described as “business as in 2025“ but “one that becomes increasingly less secure and more fragile” thanks to episodic financial stress, trade frictions and geopolitical tensions falling short of a systemic collapse but adding to volatility where the world will have to live with “managed disorder” rather than stability.

Scenario II is the fear generated by the first crossing a threshold where “disorderly multipolar breakdown rises materially…policy becomes more nationalised, and countries face sharper trade-offs between autonomy, growth, and stability”. Clearly the Survey has Donald Trump following up on all his tariff threats on social media.

The worst-case scenario draws on the “possibility that financial stress events are transmitted across borders with fewer buffers in place…involving the risk of a systemic shock cascade in which financial, technological, and geopolitical stresses amplify one another rather than unfolding independently”. In simple language, this envisages the perfect storm of geopolitical tensions, growing fiscal stress in advanced economies and what increasingly looks like a huge bubble in AI related technologies. If this happens, the “macroeconomic consequences could be worse than those of the 2008 global financial crisis” the CEA warns.

The CEA’s preface also seeks to nudge policy towards choosing the path of enduring good rather than fleeting comfort, evoking comments attributed to Yama, the god of death in the Katha Upnishad, an ancient Hindu scripture. “Against today’s global churn, India must choose to build resilience, innovate relentlessly, and stay the course toward Viksit Bharat, rather than seek quick fixes to visible, short-term pressures.” All eyes will now be on the budget to see how this larger philosophy is translated into action.



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