May 3, 2024

Crime

भिंड।मध्यप्रदेश के भिंड जिला न्यायालय के विशेष न्यायाधीश ने एक नाबालिग को बहला-फुसला कर उसे अगवा करने और उसके साथ दुष्कर्म करने के दोषी ठहराए गए युवक को आजीवन कारावास की सजा सुनाई है।अदालत ने उस पर 20 हजार रुपए का अर्थदंड लगाया है। वहीं पीड़िता को तीन लाख रुपए प्रतिकर के रुप में दिए जाने का आदेश दिया है।

एडीपीओ केपी यादव ने आज यहां बताया 25 जनवरी 2021 को अटेर निवासी एक नाबालिग अपने कमरे में सोई हुई थी। सुबह वह अपने कमरे से गायब मिली। उसके माता पिता ने उसे आसपास काफी तलाश किया, लेकिन उसका सुराग नहीं मिला। ऐसे परिजन ने अटेर थाने में रिपोर्ट दर्ज कराई। पुलिस ने जांच के दौरान आरोपी हरमेश कुशवाह (19) निवासी कपूरपुरा थाना फूप के कब्जे से नाबालिग को छुड़ाया।

नाबालिग ने बताया कि घटना वाली रात उसने हरमेश को फोन लगाकर अपने गांव बुलाया था। वह हरमेश को पसंद करती थी और दोनों एक-दूसरे से शादी करना चाहते थे। हरमेश के साथ वह उसकी बाइक से उत्तरप्रदेश के इटावा चली गई। इसके बाद दोनों बस से दिल्ली चले गए। वहां से वे उत्तरप्रदेश के गौतम बुद्ध नगर में किराए पर कमरा लेकर रहने लगी और दोनों ने मंदिर में शादी कर ली।

Pc:नया लुक

Causing death by negligence is one of the charges included in the first information report registered on Monday in connection to the train accident in Balasore, reported ANI. The FIR filed by the Government Railway Police in Odisha names unidentified persons as the accused in the case.

In one of the worst train accidents in India, 278 passengers died and more than 900 were injured after three trains collided into each other on June 2.

Besides Section 304A (causing death by negligence), the FIR includes charges under Sections 37 and 38 (related to causing hurt and endangering lives through rash or negligent action) and 34 (common intention) of the Indian Penal Code and Sections 153 (unlawful and negligent action endangering lives of Railway passengers ), 154 and 175 (endangering lives) of the Railways Act against unknown persons.

“At present, the culpability of specific railway employees has not been ascertained, which will be unearthed during the investigation,” the FIR states, according to NDTV. The…

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इंटरनेट डेस्क। राजस्थान का पेपर लीक मामला एक बार फिर सुर्खियों में है और उसका कारण है इसमें ईडी की एंट्री हो जाना। सोमवार को प्रवर्तन निदेशालय यानी के ईडी की टीमों ने पेपर लीक घोटाले में राजस्थान में अलग अलग छापेमारी की। इस छापेमारी में आरपीएससीमेंबर और पेपर माफियाओं के 28 स्थानों पर ईडी ने ताबड़तोड़ कार्रवाई की।

इस कार्रवाई के बाद राजस्थान की राजनीति में उबाल आ गया है। मुख्यमंत्री अशोक गहलोत ने ईडी की कार्रवाई पर सवाल खड़े कर दिए। वहीं बीजेपी ने ईडी की कार्रवाई को जायज ठहराया है। भाजपा ने कहा की ईडी की कार्रवाई में अब जो भी आरोपी है सबके सब पकड़े जाएंगे। चाहे मंत्री हो या सीएमओ के अफसर।

मीडिया रिपोर्ट की माने तो एक टीम ने डूंगरपुर में राजस्थान लोकसेवा आयोग के सदस्य बाबूलाल कटारा के घर पर और दूसरी टीम ने अजमेर में कटारा के सरकारी आवास तथा दफ्तर पर छापा मारा। तीसरी टीम ने बाड़मेर में पेपर माफिया भजनलाल विश्नोई और चौथी टीम ने जयपुर में पेपर माफिया सुरेश ढाका के घर पर छापेमारी की। आपको बता दें की कटारा और भजनलाल तो गिरफ्तार हो गए लेकिन ढाका अभी तक फरार है।

PC-politalks.news

इंटरनेट डेस्क। ओडिशा में बालासोर ट्रेन हादसे लगभग 288 लोगों की मौत के बाद अब राजनीति शुरू हो गई है। ट्रेन हादसे को लेकर पश्चिम बंगाल बीजेपी के नेता सुवेंदु अधिकारी ने एक सनसनीखेज बयान देकर सबकों हिला दिया है। सुवेंदु ने कहा है की हादसे के पीछे तृणमूल कांग्रेस साजिश है।

सुवेंदु अधिकारी ने कहा की इन लोगों ने पुलिस की मदद से दोनों रेल अधिकारी का फोन टेप किया और ट्विटर पर डाल दिया। दोनों रेल अधिकारी की बातचीत इन लोगों को कैसे पता चली? यह टीएमसी की साजिश है। बातचीत कैसे लीक हुई सीबीआई जांच में यह भी आना चाहिए।

वहीं सुवेंदु अधिकारी के आरोपों पर तृणमूल कांग्रेस ने पटलवार किया है और जवाब देते हुए कहा है कि सुवेंदु अधिकारी अपना मानसिक संतुलन खो बैठे हैं। टीएमसी बीजेपी पर शवों की संख्या छिपाने का आरोप लगा चुकी हैं।

pc- abp news

लखनऊ। वाराणसी की एक स्थानीय अदालत ने सोमवार को कांग्रेस नेता अवधेश राय की हत्या के करीब 32 साल पुराने मामले में माफिया मुख्तार अंसारी को दोषी करार दिया।कांग्रेस नेता अजय राय के भाई अवधेश राय की तीन अगस्त, 1991 को उनके लहुराबीर आवास के द्वार पर गोली मारकर हत्या कर दी गई थी।

अजय राय की शिकायत पर इस हत्याकांड में अंसारी और अन्य के खिलाफ मामला दर्ज किया गया था।एक वकील ने वाराणसी में संवाददाताओं को बताया, “मुख्तार को 1991 के अवधेश राय हत्या मामले में दोषी ठहराया गया है। अदालत अपना फैसला बाद में सुनाएगी।”

अवधेश राय के भाई और कांग्रेस नेता अजय राय ने इस घटनाक्रम पर प्रतिक्रिया देते हुए कहा, “यह हमारे कई वर्षों के इंतजार का अंत है, मैंने, मेरे माता-पिता, अवधेश की बेटी और पूरे परिवार ने सब्र रखा था और हम मुख्तार अंसारी के आगे नहीं झुके। सरकारें आयीं, गईं और मुख्तार ने खुद को मजबूत किया। लेकिन हमने हार नहीं मानी। आज अदालत ने मुख्तार को मेरे भाई की हत्या के मामले में दोषी ठहराया है।

Pc:Zee News

For some months now, India has been seeing unfortunate visuals of some of the country’s top wrestlers protesting on the streets. The trigger: a litany of sexual harassment allegations against the president of Wrestling Federation of India, Brij Bhushan Singh.

Even after multiple complaints surfaced, the government refused to prosecute Singh, who also happens to be a Bharatiya Janata Party MP. Frustrated, the wrestlers protested. This had some impact, as the protest forced the Supreme Court to briefly hear the matter after which the Delhi police, at last, relented and filed FIRs against the BJP MP.

Yet, remarkably, even then, it did not arrest Singh.

This lack of action becomes even starker when one sees the severity and scale of the allegations against Singh. There are at least 10 allegations of harassment against the politician, two accusing him of using his power as WIF president to demand sexual favors from sportswomen while multiple others detail groping.

The media lover PM of country, didn’t noticed  wrestlers protest. Master stroke hitter PM not taking any action against  powerful MP Brij Bhushan Singh. Many cases of sexual harassments against BJP leaders are in row , but expert of every field ….yes its our PM! not speaking any words against them, and with ignorance continues this bullshit by BJP leaders. Very Shameful act by PM!

इंटरनेट डेस्क। पिछले कुछ दिनों से महिला पहलवानों के साथ यौन शोषण के मामले में गंभीर आरोप झेल रहे बीजेपी सांसद बृजभूषण शरण अब चारों और से घिरते नजर आ रहे है। बृजभूषण के खिलाफ पहलवानों के आंदोलन को किसानों ने पूरी तरह से सपोर्ट कर दिया है। किसानों ने शुक्रवार को उनके सपोर्ट में कुरुक्षेत्र में महापंचायत की।

इस बीच किसान नेता राकेश टिकैत ने बड़ा ऐलान भी कर दिया। उन्होंने बताया की महापंचाय में निर्णय लिया गया है की सरकार को पहलवानों की शिकायतों का समाधान करना चाहिए। साथ ही उन्हें बृजभूषण सिंह की गिरफ्तार करनी चाहिए। महापंचायत ने तय किया है की उनकी गिरफ्तारी से कम पर कोई समझौता नहीं होगा।

टिकेत ने कहा है की अगर ऐसा नहीं होता है तो हम 9 जून को पहलवानों के साथ दिल्ली के जंतर-मंतर जाएंगे। खाप नेताओं ने चेतावनी दी है कि अगर उन्हें जंतर-मंतर पर बैठने की अनुमति नहीं दी गई तो आंदोलन की घोषणा की जाएगी। टिकैत का कहना है कि सरकार को मौका दिया जाएगा। महिला पहलवानों के परिजनों को धमकाया जा रहा है। सरकार को उनकी सुरक्षा सुनिश्चित करनी चाहिए।

pc- aaj tak

नोएडा(उप्र)। नोएडा में इकोटेक-3 थनाक्षेत्र की एक संचार कंपनी से एक विदेशी आपूर्तिकर्ता ने माल बेचने के नाम पर कथित रूप से 7012 डॉलर ठग लिये।

थाना प्रभारी निरीक्षक सुनील दत्त ने बताया कि पीटी कम्युनिकेशन सिस्टम प्राइवेट लिमिटेड के प्रबंधक आलोक कुमार मिश्रा ने रिपोर्ट दर्ज कराई है कि उनकी कंपनी एक विदेशी आपूर्तिकर्ता से माल खरीदने हेतु बातचीत कर रही थी और उसके साथ उनकी कंपनी का 11,440 डालर में सौदा तय हुआ।

दत्त के अनुसार कुछ दिन बाद मिश्रा की कंपनी की ईमेल आईडी हैक हो गई तथा एक मेल आया जिसमें कहा गया कि जिस बैंक में पैसे भेजने को कहा गया था, उसके बजाय दूसरे बैंक में पैसे भेजे तथा भुगतान की रकम घटाकर 7,112 डॉलर कर दी गयी।

शिकायतकर्ता के अनुसार उनकी कंपनी द्वारा यह भुगतान कर दिया गया लेकिन बाद में उन्हें पता चला कि उनके साथ साइबर ठगी हुई है।थाना प्रभारी ने बताया कि घटना की रिपोर्ट दर्ज कर पुलिस मामले की जांच कर रही है।

Pc:Business Today

चाईबासा। झारखंड के पश्चिमी सिंहभूम जिले में दस विस्फोटक बरामद किए गए।पुलिस ने बुधवार को यह जानकारी दी।

उसने बताया कि टोन्टो पुलिस थाना इलाके में तुमबहाका गांव के निकट वनक्षेत्र से छह विस्फोटक बरामद किए गए। वहीं गोइलकेरा पुलिस थाना इलाके में पांच किलोग्राम विस्फोटक मिला। बम निष्क्रिय दस्ते ने सभी विस्फोटकों को नष्ट कर दिया।

सुरक्षा बलों ने इलाके में अभियान के दौरान ये विस्फोटक बरामद किए।गौरतलब है कि सुरक्षा बलों को निशाना बनाने के लिए नक्सलियों द्वारा लगाए गए विस्फोटकों से जनवरी से अब तक आठ लोग मारे गए हैं और 20घायल हुए हैं।

Pc:Dainik Bhaskar

A woman wearing black stands next a river surrounded by trees.

Inside the Financial Times newsroom this winter, one of its star investigative reporters, Madison Marriage, had a potentially explosive scoop involving another newspaper.

A prominent left-wing columnist, Nick Cohen, had resigned from Guardian News & Media, and Ms. Marriage had evidence that his departure followed years of unwanted sexual advances and groping of female journalists.

Ms. Marriage specialized in such investigations. She won an award for exposing a handsy black-tie event for Britain’s business elite. A technology mogul got indicted on rape charges after another article.

But her investigation on Mr. Cohen, which she hoped would begin a broader look at sexual misconduct in the British news media, was never published. The Financial Times’ editor, Roula Khalaf, killed it, according to interviews with a dozen Financial Times journalists.

It was not spiked because of reporting problems. Two women were willing to speak openly, and Ms. Marriage had supporting documentation on others. Rather, Ms. Khalaf said that Mr. Cohen did not have a big enough business profile to make him an “F.T. story,” colleagues said.

Mr. Cohen’s departure and the death of Ms. Marriage’s article offer a window into the British news media’s complicated relationship with the #MeToo movement. Leading American newsrooms — Fox News, CNN, NBC, The New York Times and others — have confronted misconduct allegations. British journalism has seen no such reckoning.

For Lucy Siegle, the death of the Financial Times article hit especially hard. In 2018, she had reported Mr. Cohen to The Guardian for groping her in the newsroom, but nothing had happened. Now it seemed the whole industry was protecting itself.

“It just amplified this sense that #MeToo is nothing but a convenient hashtag for the British media,” Ms. Siegle said. “The silence on its own industry is just really conspicuous.”

The British news media is smaller and cozier than its American counterpart, with journalists often coming from the same elite schools. Stringent libel laws present another hurdle. And in a traditional newsroom culture of drinking and gender imbalances, many stories of misconduct go untold, or face a fight.

In July 2016, for example, The Daily Mail reported that a court had granted a domestic violence restraining order against a former Financial Times executive, Ben Hughes. The article vanished from the internet without explanation.

Then, in 2019, The Sun reported that a former Guardian executive, David Pemsel, had sent messages to a former employee, pestering her for a sexual relationship. After he complained, the newspaper apologized and, though it did not say the article was inaccurate, deleted it.

In an email, Ms. Marriage said she could not comment on “F.T. decision-making” and referred questions to a spokeswoman for the newspaper, who would not comment on internal discussions. “Some reporting leads to published stories,” the spokeswoman said, “and some not.” Ms. Khalaf did not respond to requests for comment.

A close-up portrait of a man.
Mr. Cohen was seen as someone with influence, former colleagues said.Credit…Marco Secchi/Getty Images

Mr. Cohen spent two decades as a columnist for The Observer, The Guardian’s Sunday sister paper. He won a prestigious award for writing about right-wing politics in the run-up to Brexit. His book “What’s Left” was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize, Britain’s top political journalism award. Inside the newsroom, he was seen as influential, colleagues said, someone who could help your career.

His resignation in January cited “health grounds.” Secretly, the newspaper group paid him a financial settlement for quitting and agreed to confidentiality, according to three colleagues and an editor with whom Mr. Cohen spoke.

In his farewell, editors praised his “brilliant” and “incisive” coverage.

Seven women told The New York Times that Mr. Cohen had groped them or made other unwanted sexual advances over nearly two decades. Four insisted on anonymity, fearing professional repercussions. In each case, The Times reviewed documents or otherwise corroborated their accounts.

Ms. Siegle recounted Mr. Cohen grabbing her bottom in the newsroom around 2001. Five other women described similar encounters at pubs from 2008 to 2015. One said Mr. Cohen had pressed his erection against her thigh and kissed her uninvited when they met to discuss her career. A seventh said Mr. Cohen had repeatedly offered to send her explicit photographs in 2018 while she worked as an unpaid copy editor for him.

Mr. Cohen’s reputation was widely known in the newsroom, according to 10 former colleagues, both male and female. One former colleague said she and other female journalists had used a different entrance to a pub to avoid being groped by him. Another woman said she had avoided the bar downstairs from the newsroom after Mr. Cohen grabbed her knee during work drinks.

“There is so much sexism in a lot of British newspapers, and it seems, unfortunately, that many women believed sexual harassment was something you just had to put up with,” said Heather Brooke, an investigative journalist who told The Times that Mr. Cohen had groped her at an awards ceremony in 2008, before she had a high profile.

Guardian News & Media did investigate Mr. Cohen, but only after Ms. Siegle wrote on Twitter in 2021 about her experience.

Even then, it was a story that few in the British news media wanted to tell. The Guardian signed a confidentiality agreement with Mr. Cohen. The Financial Times spiked its story. Even the investigative magazine Private Eye did not cover his departure. When a reader emailed asking why, the editor replied: “Coverage of Nick Cohen’s departure from The Observer is obviously more problematic for The Eye than the others that you mention due to the fact that he used to write a freelance column for the magazine.”

Mr. Cohen’s departure got a mention only in The Press Gazette, a media trade website.

In a phone interview, Mr. Cohen said he did not have the “faintest idea” about Ms. Siegle’s accusation and questioned why she had waited so long to report it. He said the conversation with the copy editor was “joking” among friends. He blamed their accusations on a campaign by his critics, including advocates for Russia and for transgender rights.

Informed that seven women had come forward with sexual misconduct complaints, Mr. Cohen exclaimed, “Oh, God.”

“I assume it’s stuff I was doing when I was drunk,” said Mr. Cohen, a recovering alcoholic.

In a subsequent email, Mr. Cohen did not respond to specific accusations. “I have written at length about my alcoholism. I went clean seven years ago in 2016,” he said. “I look back on my addicted life with deep shame.”

Many of the women and their colleagues were especially disappointed in The Guardian because of its extensive #MeToo reporting. One week before Ms. Siegle’s complaint in 2018, it solicited tips about workplace sexual harassment.

“We take all allegations of workplace harassment extremely seriously and aim to support victims in all circumstances,” a Guardian News & Media spokesman said in a statement. “We have processes which anyone can use to raise complaints so that they can be fully investigated.”

The company did not respond to specific instances identified by The Times. It said that only Ms. Siegle had complained to senior managers about Mr. Cohen, and that she had chosen not to pursue the complaint — something she denies. As soon as Ms. Siegle went public, the company said, it opened an investigation.

Mr. Cohen left the newspaper and told The Times that he had accepted a deal after considering the financial implications for his family, in particular his son who has autism.

“I’m the only person whose life is turned over because of this,” he said.

The #MeToo movement was sweeping through society on Feb. 1, 2018, when Ms. Siegle met with The Guardian’s managing editor, Jan Thompson, to report her experiences with Mr. Cohen.

Ms. Siegle had started at The Guardian around 2001 as an editorial assistant. She described standing at a photocopier when Mr. Cohen appeared behind her, cupped her bottom with both hands, grunted and breathed heavily into her ear.

Ms. Siegle remembers returning to her desk, humiliated. She never considered reporting him. “I’m literally the least powerful person in the entire newsroom,” she said.

For 14 years, as she advanced at The Observer, she said she avoided his desk and chaperoned interns “like a mother hen crossing a busy road.”

At the Feb. 1 meeting, Ms. Siegle said Ms. Thompson responded by talking about the abuse that Mr. Cohen faced for his political views, according to notes Ms. Siegle wrote afterward. She described the meeting as a “chaotic mess of defensiveness and attack.”

The Guardian spokesman said Ms. Siegle, who was by then a freelancer for the newspaper, had opted not to pursue her complaint. Ms. Siegle says an investigation was never offered. A week after the meeting, Ms. Thompson emailed to let Ms. Siegle know that she was “here if you want to discuss further.” Ms. Siegle declined.

In interviews, former Observer and Guardian managers said they knew Mr. Cohen had a drinking problem but could not remember anyone reporting sexual misconduct. “In a way, I’m puzzled,” said Chris Elliott, a former managing editor of both papers. “Because I should have heard something about it on the grapevine.

Jean Hannah Edelstein, an assistant at The Observer from 2007 to 2009, said Mr. Cohen was not alone in his behavior. She recalled her editor hitting her with a sex whip as she walked by. Over one boozy lunch, she said, the same editor offered to help her career and suggested that she pose naked to promote her book.

Several journalists said Mr. Cohen’s reputation for groping was far from secret, and five women said he had groped them after work at pubs, including one who said he had groped her “five or six” times in 2008.

Another woman, a freelance journalist who had recently been homeless and had depression, said she had met Mr. Cohen at a pub in 2010 to discuss her career. As they chatted, she said, he suddenly kissed her on the mouth and pressed his erection against her thigh. She said she fled.

“I just remember walking along Waterloo Bridge and thinking, ‘I can’t go to The Guardian with this. Who would they believe?’” she said. “He was one of their stars, and I was a freelance journalist with mental health issues.”

Ms. Brooke, the investigative journalist, said she had initially dismissed her encounter with Mr. Cohen at the 2008 awards ceremony as “a one-off drunken mistake and didn’t take it further.” (“Nick Cohen got drunk and slapped my ass … ugh!” she wrote in her diary the next day.)

But she said that “now I know that this is a pattern of behavior over 20 years. I think it’s really important to speak out.”

A woman sits at a desk with two screens in a room with dark blue walls and strands of white Christmas lights.
Rebecca Watson, a writer and commentator, at her home in Oakland, Calif. Ms. Watson said that Mr. Cohen groped her at a book party in 2009.Credit…Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Rebecca Watson, a writer and commentator, said Mr. Cohen had grabbed her bottom at a book party in 2009. Her now-former husband said he had witnessed it but did not confront Mr. Cohen because he did not want to cause a scene.

“To sexually assault a stranger at a book launch, to be one of the more prominent people there, and to just assume there will be no comeuppance,” Ms. Watson said.

Not long after Ms. Siegle lodged her 2018 complaint with The Guardian, records show that Mr. Cohen began working with a freelance copy editor, a single mother with autism.

She worked remotely for Mr. Cohen, unpaid. On June 29, 2018, a work conversation over direct messages on Twitter became punctuated with mutually flirtatious jokes. Mr. Cohen offered to send an explicit photograph. The woman declined. Mr. Cohen persisted and she deflected again.

In the following days, the copy editor said, Mr. Cohen turned cold. In messages, she apologized if she had misread the situation. Eventually, she told him continuing to work together “would be at a cost too high for my own mental health.”

Mr. Cohen, in his email to The Times, said this was the only accusation to surface since he quit drinking and said it had been misrepresented. “It involves a friendship with a woman I never met that, sadly, went badly wrong,” he said.

In 2019, the copy editor asked The Guardian’s human resources team about the process for raising sexual misconduct claims, emails show. She described the incident without naming Mr. Cohen, saying she felt “huge pressure” to go along with his “banter.”

Because she was not a Guardian employee, the copy editor said she was told that she would not be informed of the investigation’s outcome. Being frozen out of the process terrified her, so she backed off.

In fall 2021, Ms. Siegle wrote on Twitter about her experience. Her lawyer, Jolyon Maugham, began making noise. Ms. Thompson immediately emailed.

“Given that you have now tweeted publicly,” Ms. Thompson wrote, “I hope that it means that your position has now changed, and that you would be willing to provide further information so that we can investigate the matter fully.”

Ms. Siegle said that was misleading, that The Guardian had not offered to investigate in 2018.

Eventually, Mr. Cohen was suspended and The Guardian hired a law firm to carry out an independent inquiry. Neither Ms. Siegle nor the copy editor agreed to participate.

A red-brick building with an ornate entrance.
The Financial Times building in London. The newspaper spiked an investigation into Nick Cohen, a columnist at The Observer. Credit…Andrew Testa for The New York Times

Mr. Cohen confirmed that he signed an agreement to leave the newspaper, but would not discuss the terms.

Ian Hislop, the editor of Private Eye, said he had discussed the terms of The Guardian’s deal with Mr. Cohen, who no longer writes for Private Eye. “Instead of any conclusion,” Mr. Hislop said of the Guardian investigation, “it ended up with a secret agreement and a big cash payment.”

In December 2022, the Financial Times editor, Ms. Khalaf, emailed the newsroom about the coming year’s priorities. Among them were Ms. Marriage’s investigations into abuses of power.

Publicly, the newspaper had declared “no topic or scandal off limits.” Privately, there were limits.

Ms. Marriage had already begun investigating Mr. Cohen and sexual misconduct across the British news media, but Ms. Khalaf shackled the investigation, telling Ms. Marriage not to contact any new sources, according to two colleagues with whom Ms. Marriage spoke. Her team had already interviewed five of Mr. Cohen’s accusers.

In February, Ms. Khalaf said she would not run the investigation as a news article, several journalists recalled, and suggested that Ms. Marriage file it as an opinion piece. She did, but it still did not run.

A half-dozen Financial Times journalists said they saw it as part of a wider reluctance to expose bad behavior within its industry.

The Financial Times, like others, has wrestled with gender issues. In June 2020, 56 female staff members wrote to Ms. Khalaf about a “bro culture” that excluded women from decision-making.

People walk across a quad lined with trees and buildings.The prominent art history professor and his student had finished dinner and were strolling along the river in Kyoto, Japan’s picturesque former capital, when they stopped at a bar.

For months, they had been spending a lot of time together, and the professor had already kissed her once in a park in Tokyo. Now, after drinks, he invited her to his hotel, where they had a sexual encounter that she said was against her will. He said it was consensual.

From that conflicted beginning, they embarked on a clandestine, decade-long relationship that included furtive meetings, volleys of amorous notes and several trips overseas.

Over time, the student came to believe that the professor had taken advantage of the power imbalance between them, and that she had never truly consented to any of it.

When she finally broke off the relationship, she made an official complaint to the university and sued the professor for sexual harassment. Her argument: that he had exploited his position as her supervisor when she was 23 to groom her for sex, assault her and then fundamentally hold her under his sway for years.

But in a twist, she also found herself sued by the professor’s wife, accused of adultery and causing mental distress under Japan’s civil code, which views extramarital relationships as an infringement of the marriage contract.

In the end, the wife won nearly $20,000. The professor was fired last year for, the university said, conducting an “inappropriate relationship.” But the young woman lost her case when the court ruled that the professor had never forced her to do anything against her will.

The story of Meiko Sano, now 38; her professor, Michio Hayashi, 63; and his wife, Machiko, 74, highlights the tangled state of sexual power dynamics in Japan, where women rarely bring — much less win — cases for sexual harassment, and where the #MeToo movement has yet to take hold as it has in the West.

Ms. Sano knew her sexual harassment suit against Mr. Hayashi was a long shot. But she went through with it, she said in several interviews, to show how she had experienced “psychological abuse like grooming and gaslighting that Japanese are really not sure about.”

Although the case received muted attention in the Japanese news media, it roiled the Japanese art world and academic community, where, unlike in the United States, few universities prohibit relationships between professors and students. At the same time, rigid age and status hierarchies are culturally pervasive, making it difficult for subordinates — especially women — to say no to their superiors, experts say.

“Within Japan there is this culture where we should all try to get along,” said Yukiko Sato, the director of Spring, a nonprofit advocacy group for sexual assault survivors. “So if you are asked to have sex, you might find it difficult to say no.”

Students on the campus of Sophia University last year. Michio Hayashi was fired by the university for conducting an “inappropriate relationship.”Credit…Noriko Hayashi for The New York Times

In court, Ms. Sano repeatedly made that argument. But Japan’s laws on sexual assault do not mention consent, reflecting skepticism that anyone can be forced into sex without violence.

“In terms of sexual assault, there has to be a great threat and the victim has to fight back,” said Mizuki Kawamoto, a lawyer who reviewed possible amendments to the country’s sex crimes laws. The current law, she said, does not protect people who “were coerced psychologically into saying yes.”

By contrast, laws in the United States and some European countries take into account that a victim may not be able to consent because of illness or intoxication, or that an offender could exploit a situation of authority.

In court filings, Ms. Sano said that after the first sexual encounter with Mr. Hayashi, “since she wasn’t covered in bruises, she didn’t think of herself as a sexual abuse victim.”

The judge’s ruling, in March, acknowledged a gray zone between coercion and consent, deeming it “suitable” that Mr. Hayashi had been fired. But in tearful remarks, Ms. Sano said the judgment did not take “into account what someone who is in a higher position than you can actually do to your psyche.”

Although Ms. Sano lost the case, the court ordered the professor to pay her 1.28 million yen, close to $9,800, to take responsibility for his share of the penalties imposed on her in his wife’s lawsuit.

Tomoe Yatagawa, who lectures on gender law at universities in Tokyo, said Mrs. Hayashi’s suit might seem “a bit strange” when the marital contract was between husband and wife, yet Ms. Sano was held responsible for breaking it. But experts say these cases are not rare.

Mrs. Hayashi, who declined to comment for this article, said in court filings that she resented her husband for committing adultery but that she did not believe he was guilty of sexual harassment. She accused Ms. Sano of “pushing all the responsibility of their relationship onto my husband, as if she is wholeheartedly the victim.”

Ms. Sano met the professor in 2004, when she was an undergraduate at Tokyo’s Sophia University, and enrolled in Mr. Hayashi’s art history course. He was a well-known specialist in modern Japanese art, with outspoken views on feminism and free speech.

For a long time, their relationship was strictly academic. They discussed her graduate school ambitions. He offered to write her a recommendation and helped her secure an internship.

The summer and fall before she began her graduate studies in 2007, the boundaries between them began to blur as Mr. Hayashi started grooming her, she said, for a romantic relationship. He invited her to regular teas. She felt she could not refuse.

“He would make suggestions for reading or study sessions for grad school, and it felt like he had expectations for me,” Ms. Sano said. “And I felt like I couldn’t betray that.”

Image

A man in a blue button-up shirt and glasses sits behind a desk, holding a microphone he is speaking into.
Mr. Hayashi, an expert on contemporary Japanese art, was Ms. Sano’s supervisor. Credit…Ujin Matsuo

Some advocates say Japanese institutions like Sophia need clearer guidance about relationships between students and professors. The government recently called on universities to provide more information about counseling services for sexual harassment and violence, and to disclose when disciplinary actions are taken.

“Any relationship between a supervisor or professor and a student is by definition harassment” because of “the desire to please someone in power,” said Kazue Muta, a professor of sociology and gender studies at Osaka University.

Mr. Hayashi, who declined to comment for this article, admitted in testimony that the relationship had been “inappropriate” because he was married and was Ms. Sano’s supervisor. But he said Ms. Sano had consented to, and even encouraged, it.

One of his primary pieces of evidence was a thank you card she and other students sent him after they joined him on a museum tour around central Japan the summer before Ms. Sano began graduate school. On the card, which she wrote in English, she addressed him as “Dearest Professor H” and signed her message “xox,” a flourish not commonly used in Japan.

“To be addressed as ‘dearest,’ in a message from a student to a professor, there is a familiarity there that is not quite normal,” Mr. Hayashi testified.

Ms. Sano said she meant the note merely to show “gratitude and thanks.”

Mr. Hayashi said he and Ms. Sano “grew closer” as they spent time together, according to the court record. Ms. Sano confided in Mr. Hayashi that she felt like an outsider in Japan after spending much of her childhood in England; he assured her he understood because of his experience abroad.

In the fall, when she began graduate school with Mr. Hayashi as her supervisor, she took a walk with him in a Tokyo park. He kissed her.

“Saying no and making him look bad was out of the question,” she said.

In court filings and testimony, Mr. Hayashi, then 48, said he believed he and Ms. Sano, then 23, were dating.

Ms. Sano accompanied him on the trip to Kyoto that fall, where he was lecturing at an art symposium. She testified that when he asked her to join him in his hotel room, she refused him multiple times and said she should return to her own room. He said the decision to go to his room was mutual.

Both testified that Mr. Hayashi performed oral sex on Ms. Sano, but she portrayed it as unwelcome. She said she asked him repeatedly to wait — signaling resistance, she told the court. “But he kept saying, ‘It’s OK, it’s OK,’” Ms. Sano said.

Over the next 10 years, they regularly met in Tokyo at so-called love hotels, with a mixing of academic discussion and sex. Mr. Hayashi reviewed Ms. Sano’s thesis at one of these hotels, the court filings said.

Ms. Sano sent him affectionate notes and accompanied him on trips to France, Italy and Spain, both while she was under his supervision and after graduation. Mr. Hayashi said such behavior again proved the relationship was consensual, although he acknowledged he wanted to keep it secret.

Image

A woman in a white top and black pants sits on a couch, looking into the distance.
Ms. Sano said she was coping with post-traumatic stress disorder and working on recovering her ability “to say no.” Credit…Noriko Hayashi for The New York Times

She said that her behavior was a sign of indoctrination, and that she was afraid to be “rude” to her supervisor, who had authority over her future career.

When she would try to end the relationship, she said in court filings, Mr. Hayashi would accuse her of being “paranoid” or tell her she would never be able to date anyone else. She said Mr. Hayashi told her: “You can sue me for sexual harassment if you wanted to. But you won’t because you’re not that kind of girl.”

Mr. Hayashi said in court filings that he never made those remarks or coerced Ms. Sano and that they were simply “adults enjoying a ‘free love’ relationship.”

“I understand that I was way too naïve, and I still hate myself for it,” Ms. Sano said. “There were so many times where I could have just said, ‘No,’ and run away.”

By the spring of 2018, Ms. Sano was working at an art gallery in Tokyo and broke off the relationship for good. She slowly began to tell her family and a small circle of friends about it — and grappled with an overwhelming sense of shame. She said she began cutting herself and considered suicide.

Shusaku Sano, Ms. Sano’s eldest brother, said his sister told him she had been brainwashed. “I knew for sure that she was hurt,” he said.

Haruko Kumakura, an assistant curator at a museum in Tokyo who collaborated with Ms. Sano on an exhibit, said she was “disgusted” when Ms. Sano told her about Mr. Hayashi, a figure of respect in the art world.

Early the next year, Ms. Sano contacted Mr. Hayashi’s wife. “I just felt like I had to tell her the truth of what had happened and that I was sorry,” Ms. Sano said. Ms. Sano also wanted his wife to know that she felt Mr. Hayashi had manipulated her.

According to court filings, Mr. Hayashi confessed the relationship to his wife, who filed her suit against Ms. Sano.

In an email that was part of the court record, Mrs. Hayashi, through her lawyer, wrote to Ms. Sano, “If the relationship was coerced by my husband, you could have easily filed a complaint with the university” from the start.

Experts in sexual harassment say it will take more than legal action to change the culture.

“The commonly accepted view is that if a woman accepts a kiss or goes on a date then it’s consensual,” said Ms. Muta of Osaka University, who advocates university policies barring romantic relationships between professors and students. “We are struggling to change the climate, but we are not so successful yet.”

Ms. Sano said she was now in therapy, coping with post-traumatic stress disorder. She lives with her parents and has not been able to work full time since she left the art gallery in 2019.

One of her primary goals, she said, is to recover “my ability to say no.”

Rajesh Vishwas, a food inspector, used a diesel pump to empty part of a reservoir where he had lost his smartphone in Reservoir. He drained that Reservoir to search his phone. After matter known by admins they suspended this man.

मुंबई। मुंबई पुलिस ने मादक पदार्थ रखने के आरोप में एक व्यक्ति को गिरफ्तार किया और उसके पास से करीब 31 लाख रुपये का मेफेड्रोन बरामद किया। एक अधिकारी ने शनिवार को यह जानकारी दी।अधिकारी ने बताया कि तलाशी अभियान बृहस्पतिवार रात चलाया गया था।

उन्होंने बताया, मुंबई पुलिस की अपराध शाखा की इकाई चार के कर्मियों ने गश्त के दौरान एक संदिग्ध को शहर के सायन इलाके में स्थित एक बस अड्डे के पास संदिग्ध तरीके से घूमते हुए देखा।पुलिस ने जब उसकी तलाशी ली तो उसके पास से 58 ग्राम मादक पदार्थ बरामद हुआ। आरोपी की पहचान रईस हकीम सैय्यद (53) के रूप में हुई है।

अधिकारी ने बताया कि बाद में पुलिस की टीम तस्कर के साथ उसके चुनाभट्टी स्थित घर पर गई, जहां उन्होंने एक नाप-तौल मशीन और पैकिंग सामग्री के साथ 100 ग्राम और मादक पदार्थ बरामद किया।उन्होंने बताया कि आरोपी तस्कर के पास से बरामद मादक पदार्थ की कुल कीमत करीब 31 लाख रुपये है।उन्होंने कहा कि आरोपी को स्वापक औषधि और मनःप्रभावी पदार्थ अधिनियम (एनडीपीएस) के तहत गिरफ्तार किया गया। इस मामले को लेकर और भी लोगों के पकड़े जाने की संभावना है।

Pc:Pexels

नयी दिल्ली। साइबर ठगों ने दक्षिण पश्चिम दिल्ली में रहने वाली 40 वर्षीय एक बैंककर्मी को ;भोजन की एक थाली पर दूसरी थाली मुफ्त मिलने का लालच देकर उसके मोबाइल फोन में एक ऐप डाउनलाउड कराई और उसके बैंक खाते से 90,000 रुपये निकाल लिए।

शिकायतकर्ता सविता शर्मा ने साइबर थाने में प्राथमिकी दर्ज कराई है।एक बैंक में वरिष्ठ प्रतिनिधि के तौर पर काम करने वाली शर्मा ने पुलिस को बताया कि उनके एक रिश्तेदार ने उन्हें एक थाली खरीदने पर दूसरी थाली मुफ्त पाने की पेशकश के बारे में फेसबुक पर जानकारी दी थी।महिला ने 27 नवंबर, 2022 को संबंधित वेबसाइट खोली और इस पेशकश के बारे में जानकारी हासिल करने के लिए दिए गए नंबर पर फोन किया।

शर्मा ने इस साल दो मई को दर्ज अपनी प्राथमिकी में कहा कि उनके पास फोन आया और “फोन करने वाले ने उन्हें सागर रत्ना (एक लोकप्रिय रेस्तरां) का ;ऑफर प्राप्त करने के लिए कहा।”शर्मा ने ;पीटीआई-भाषा से कहा, “फोन करने वाले ने एक लिंक साझा किया और मुझे ऑफ़र का लाभ उठाने के लिए एक ऐप डाउनलोड करने को कहा। उसने ऐप खोलने के लिए यूजर आईडी और पासवर्ड भी भेजा।

उसने मुझसे कहा कि अगर मैं ऑफर का लाभ उठाना चाहती हूं तो मुझे पहले इस ऐप पर पंजीकरण कराना होगा।” महिला ने कहा, “मैंने लिंक पर क्लिक किया और ऐप डाउनलोड हो गया। फिर मैंने यूजर आईडी और पासवर्ड डाला। जैसे ही मैंने ये सब किया, मेरा फोन हैक हो गया। फिर मुझे संदेश मिला कि मेरे खाते से 40,000 रुपये काट लिए गए हैं।”शर्मा ने कहा कि कुछ सेकेंड बाद उन्हें एक और संदेश मिला कि उनके खाते से 50,000 रुपये निकाले गए हैं।

Pc:The Business Standard (Hindi)

The Delhi High Court on Friday asked the police what action it took against a Twitter user who posted an offensive tweet about Alt News co-founder Mohammed Zubair in August 2020, Live Law reported.

Justice Anup Jairam Bhambhani told the police to file a status report in six weeks.

“You went hammer and tongs against him [Zubair],” the judge noted. “But the case has now ended in a whimper, as it should have… because there was no evidence. But what action have you taken against this man? [the person who posted the allegedly offensive tweet].”

The lawyer for the police told the court that it was conscious of the Supreme Court’s directions that action should be taken in hate speech without waiting for a complaint. The counsel said that appropriate action would be taken in the case, according to PTI.

The High Court posted the case for further hearing on September 14.

The case pertains to a tweet Zubair had posted in August 2020 in which he had shared the profile picture of a Twitter user asking if it was appropriate for him to use derogatory language in replies while using the photo of his granddaughter. Zubair had blurred the profile picture in his tweet.

The Delhi Police had registered a first information report against…

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Five police personnel in Rajasthan’s Udaipur district were suspended on Friday after a 25-year-old man died in their custody, PTI reported.

The station house officer of the Gogunda police station was among the personnel who were suspended.

Four more police personnel were sent to the reserve police line on account of their alleged negligence, Superintendent of Police Vikas Sharma said.

The man who died was identified as Surendra Singh Devra, a resident of the Devro Ko Kheri village, the Hindustan Times reported. He was said to have eloped with a woman, after which her family filed an abduction case against him.

A team of the Rajasthan police took him into custody from Gujarat and brought him to the Gogunda police station.

“He [Devra] was kept at the police station for questioning when he suddenly fainted and was immediately rushed to MB Hospital,” the superintendent of police said. “However, the doctors declared him dead, stating that he had suffered a cardiac arrest.”

Devra’s relatives then held a protest outside the police station, seeking compensation for his family.

Yogendra Singh Katar, the state president of the Shree Rajput Karni Sena, also took part in the protest. He demanded that a murder case be registered against those allegedly responsible for the 25-year-old’s death. He also sought compensation of Rs 50 lakh…

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International consulting firm Deloitte has sacked an employee who called German dictator Adolf Hitler a “charismatic visionary” in a LinkedIn post last week, the Hindustan Times reported.

The man, Neerabh Mehrotra, was an associate director in Deloitte’s Risk Advisory Department.

In his post on LinkedIn, Mehrotra said that he had read a book by Laurence Rees titled, The Dark Charisma of Adolf Hitler. He said that a Google search about the ruler would suggest that he was “autocratic” and “very egocentric”.

However, Mehrotra subsequently listed out several of Hitler’s “charismatic qualities” and remarked that we should “all learn” from him. He said that the German ruler was a “charismatic visionary, magnetic speaker, extremely confident, very intellectual and massive action taker”.

Several Twitter users criticised him for his post and questioned why Deloitte had employed such a person.

Amid the backlash, Mehrotra in an open letter apologised for his post and said he did not intend to hurt anyone’s feelings, Moneycontrol reported. “My mentors/bosses/coaches have always taught me that if I make a mistake then I should have the audacity to accept it as well, so here I come forward to sincerely apologise for my post and I will not write anything…

Suspect in killing of 4 people, including 2 police officers, in Japan captured after standoff

Japan Shooting

Police say they have arrested the suspect who holed up in a house in central Japan after allegedly killing four people, including two police officers

TOKYO — Police said they arrested a man Friday who had holed up in his father’s house armed with a rifle and a knife after allegedly killing four people, including two police officers, in central Japan.

TV Asahi showed the man with his hands on his head walk out of the house and be ushered toward a police vehicle.

Masanori Aoki, 31, a farmer, was arrested by police under a court warrant on suspicion of murder in Nakano, a city in Nagano prefecture.

Nagano prefectural police chief Iwao Koyama offered condolences to the victims and said the loss of two police officials is “extremely regrettable.” He noted that the suspect allegedly shot to death a police officer in the left chest with a hunting rifle.

National Public Safety Commission Chairperson Koichi Tani told a regular news conference Friday that the suspect had licenses for multiple hunting and air guns authorized by the prefectural public safety commission and his license renewals have been properly made.

Tani said police are investigating his gun usage records and that they plan to take necessary safety measures based on investigation results.

Police said the house was owned by his father, a local politician. Koyama said two women who escaped while the suspect was holed up are the suspect’s mother and aunt and that they were uninjured. NHK said that the mother told police that the attacker was her son and that his father was chairman of the city assembly.

Japanese media quoted neighbors described the suspect as a quiet person and that they were not aware of any family feud.

Police said earlier that two police officers were shot by the suspect when they arrived at the scene after receiving an emergency call saying a woman was stabbed. The officers were apparently without bulletproof vests.

On Friday, Nagano police chief said the suspect allegedly stabbed to death the 66-year-old woman with a survival knife.

A witness told NHK on Thursday that a woman fell while being chased by the suspect, who then stabbed her with a knife and shot at two police officers as they arrived at the scene in a patrol car.

The woman and the two police officers were pronounced dead at a hospital. An older woman, who was injured but could not be rescued because she was near the suspect, was found dead early Friday, police said.

During the standoff, TV footage showed police wearing bulletproof vests and carrying shields, with an ambulance nearby. Police sealed off a 300-meter (330-yard) radius around the house, and city officials urged people in the quiet farming neighborhood to stay home or stay at an evacuation center, where about 80 people reportedly took shelter.

Violent crimes are rare in Japan. It has strict gun control laws and only a handful of gun-related crimes annually. But in recent years, there have been some high-profile cases involving random knifings on subways and arson attacks, and there is growing concern about homemade guns and explosives.

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This story has been corrected to correct attribution in the 2nd paragraph to TV Asahi.

A search of a reservoir in Portugal that came more than 16 years after the British girl went missing resulted in the collection of some material but did not solve the mystery of her disappearance.

Portuguese police have said material unearthed from a reservoir in Algarve will be sent to Germany for analysis after the first major search for Madeleine McCann in a decade came to a close.

After three days of excavation on a spit of land jutting into the Barragem do Arade reservoir in south Portugal, officers were stood down and a spokesperson for the Polícia Judiciária said the collected material would be delivered to the German authorities.

German prosecutor Christian Wolters said: “Of course we are still looking for the body. We’re not just looking for that, of course. There are other things too. Any discovery of clothing could help our investigation.”

The search had been requested by the German authorities who are seeking to prove the case that Christian Brückner, 45, a convicted rapist, killed Madeleine, who was three years old when she went missing from her parents’ holiday apartment in the Portuguese town of Praia da Luz in 2007.

The operation, completed by the Portuguese and German officers but with Metropolitan police officers in attendance, had involved clearing a number of areas on a bank on the reservoir.

One 10-metre squared patch of land appeared to have been the focus of the investigation. The slope of the bank had been cleared of wood and cut into. A series of deep pot holes had been scoured into the ground and soil samples had evidently been removed.

There were signs of past human habitation including a rusting chair and a blue suitcase. have only said that “indications” and “tips” led them to seek the search but it has been suggested that photographs found in 2016 had provided evidence that Brückner had regularly visited the reservoir which he is said to have described as “my little paradise”.

Kate and Gerry McCann, who had been eating a tapas meal within eyesight of their holiday apartment when their daughter disappeared on 4 May 2007, now face a tense wait for the results.

Wolters, whose force requested the operation, said there would be a period of silence.

Wolters said that as the accused had not yet had access to the files, the authorities would not yet publish any new evidence that might implicate Brückner, a German national who was the prime suspect in Madeleine’s disappearance.

Holes dug for soil samples in the area where authorities have searched for Madeleine McCann.
Holes dug for soil samples in the area where authorities have searched for Madeleine McCann. Photograph: Daniel Boffey/The Guardian

A spokesperson for the Polícia Judiciária said: “The steps requested by the German authorities, through a request for international cooperation, have been fulfilled, which resulted in the collection of some material that will be subject to the competent expertise.

“The operation was coordinated by the judiciary police, which involved investigators, criminal experts and security personnel. Safeguarding the interests of the investigation still under way in Portugal, the collected material will be delivered to the German authorities.”

The operation was the biggest search for a decade into the then three-year-old’s disappearance. It had been due to end on Tuesday but it had taken an additional day to complete the planned work.

Wolters said they had a search warrant for a specific area, which had to be searched in its entirety. He said: “If we don’t find anything, we will certainly tell you quickly.”

There was no further statement on Thursday. The site of the search was 30 miles from where Madeleine went missing 16 years ago.

The former Portuguese detective Gonçalo Amaral, who led the botched Portuguese investigation in 2007, claimed it was a waste of resources and a sham.

Amaral, who successfully fought a defamation case in 2016 after claiming Madeleine died in her parents’ holiday apartment, predicted it would come to nothing.

“In a simple analysis I see there is no new investigation and what is occurring is more a case of constructing a profile and a scapegoat,” he said. Amaral lost a libel battle with lawyers representing Kate and Gerry McCann after publication of his book but he subsequently had the result overturned on appeal.

German police have been keen to emphasise that their chief suspect had not confessed nor offered any help as they swept the area.

Brückner, who was jailed in 2019 for the rape of a 72-year-old American tourist a mile from the McCanns’ holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, was officially named by the Portuguese police as a suspect, or arguido, last year in the disappearance of the British child.

His mobile phone’s signal had been located in the immediate area of the Mark Warner Oceans resort where the McCanns had been staying on the day of Madeleine’s disappearance. He has not been charged with any offence in relation to Madeleine’s case, and has denied any involvement.

Last month, a German court said it was cancelling a sexual offences trial against Brückner on charges unrelated to McCann’s disappearance but which were also said to have taken place in Portugal, on the grounds that the region where it is located is not the last place he lived in Germany.

He had been facing prosecution in Braunschweig over three offences of aggravated rape of women and two offences of sexual abuse of children. The alleged offences took place in Portugal between December 2000 and July 2017. The force in Braunschweig is challenging the ruling.

Mark Hofmann, a criminal profiler in Germany, said Brückner, who is serving a seven-year prison sentence, had a history of keeping “trophies” from his crimes. He said: “From chat histories with like-minded people and from other crimes it is known that Christian B tends to do exactly this: documenting his crimes.”

The free press is under attack from multiple forces. Media outlets are closing their doors, victims to a broken business model. In much of the world, journalism is morphing into propaganda, as governments dictate what can and can’t be printed. In the last year alone, hundreds of reporters have been killed or imprisoned for doing their jobs. The UN reports that 85% of the world’s population experienced a decline in press freedom in their country in recent years.

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Unlike many others, we have no billionaire owner – this helps us maintain the freedom to fearlessly chase the truth and report it with integrity. Your support will allow us to continue to work with trademark determination and passion to bring you journalism that’s always free from commercial or political interference.

Republic TV Editor-in-Chief Arnab Goswami has tendered an unconditional apology before the Delhi High Court in a contempt case filed by environmentalist RK Pachauri, Live Law reported on Thursday.

“I hereby tender my apology to this Hon’ble Court and request that this Hon’ble Court may graciously be pleased to accept the apology and close the instant proceedings against the deponent,” Goswami said in the affidavit submitted on April 28.

Pachauri, who died in 2020, had filed a contempt case in 2016 against several media houses for “fragrant and wilful disobedience” of two court orders which had restricted reporting on sexual harassment allegations against him. He had said that the media reports were defamatory and prejudiced against him, according to Newslaundry.

Pachauri, the former director of The Energy and Resources Institute, was accused of sexually harassing a female colleague in 2015.

Besides Goswami, who was the editor-in-chief of Times Now then, the plea was filed against Bennet & Coleman, The Economic Times, Raghav Ohri and Prannoy Roy, according to Live Law.

In his apology, Goswami told the court that he is a law-abiding, respectable citizen of the country and holds the court in high esteem.

“I had no intention to commit any act/ omission amounting to disobedience much less, wilful disobedience of the orders of this court,” he said, reported Live Law. “I say that the alleged…

One person died and two others were injured in separate incidents of violence in Manipur on Wednesday, the state government said.

The person who died was identified as 30-year-old Toijam Chandramani, who hailed from the Churachandpur district. He succumbed to bullet injuries while he was being taken to a hospital, state security advisor Kuldiep Singh told the media.

Singh said that on Tuesday night, a group of suspected militants had burned down three homes in the Bishnupur district. In retaliation, unidentified persons reportedly burned down some more homes at Phoubakchao and nearby areas.

Several residents then engaged in demonstrations and started chasing the attackers, due to which security forces were brought in to control the situation. The security advisor said that around 9.30 am, Chandramani and another person sustained injuries from bullets “which were being fired from the side of the hills”.

The situation in the area is now tense but under control, the official said.

Earlier on Wednesday, a man named Aribam Rishikesh Sharma sustained a bullet injury in firing by suspected militants in Singda, which is located about 19 kilometres from Imphal.

“Soon after the incident was reported, BSF [Border Security Force] and one section of Manipur Rifles rushed to the spot, chased the militants and brought the injured…

Image:

The Yallambee Lodge in Cooma, Australia.Lukas Coch / AAP via AP

A 95-year-old Australian woman died Wednesday, a week after a police officer shot her with a stun gun in a nursing home as she moved toward him using a walker and carrying a steak knife, in a tragedy that has outraged many Australians.

Clare Nowland, who had dementia, had been hospitalized in Cooma in New South Wales state since her skull was fractured when she fell on May 17 after Constable Kristian White shocked her with a stun gun.

Police announced Nowland’s death hours after reporting that White has been ordered to appear in court on July 5 on charges of recklessly causing grievous bodily harm, assault occasioning actual bodily harm, and common assault. The charges are likely to be upgraded following her death.

White and another police officer had gone to Yallambee Lodge, a nursing home in Cooma that specializes in residents with higher care needs including dementia, after staff reported that Nowland had taken a serrated steak knife from the kitchen.

The violence against an elderly and incapacitated woman has sparked a national debate about the police use of stun guns in such circumstances and the competence of aged care staff. Police are allowed to use stun guns when lives are in danger.

A coroner will determine the cause of death. Police say her injuries resulted from falling to the floor, not from the electric charge from the Taser-brand stun gun.

Australian woman, 95, is in critical condition after police fired a taser at her

White has been under police internal investigation since the incident and has been suspended from duty with pay since Tuesday.

White and his police partner on the day have images of the incident from their body cameras, but police have declined to release them.

The government elected a year ago is increasing resources for aged care.

In February, the death by suicide of Darshan Solanki, a Dalit student of IIT Bombay, reignited a debate about the treatment of students from marginalised communities in India’s educational institutions. In Solanki’s case, details are continuing to emerge about what led to his death. But the problem is a larger one – in December 2021, the education minister stated in parliament that 122 students in Central government higher educational institutions had died by suicide between 2014 and 2021, and that 68 of these students were from Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribe and Other Backward Class communities.

In a two-part series, Scroll revisited two such cases from the past, to examine how institutions responded to the suicides and whether the campuses changed as a result. The first part revisited an Adivasi scholar’s death in West Bengal’s Vidhyasar University. The second part comes from one of India’s oldest and most elite scientific institutions, the Indian Institute of Science, in Bengaluru.

In 2007, Ajay Sree Chandra was a second-year PhD student at the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru. On August 26 that year, Chandra, who was from a Scheduled Caste, died by suicide in his hostel room.

In a 2012 documentary film by Round Table India, an anti-caste…

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An inmate at Delhi’s Tihar jail died by suicide on Monday hours after he was convicted by a court in a robbery case, reported the Hindustan Times.

The man, 26-year-old Jawed, was found hanging in a bathroom in the jail.

“As per the security officials, Jawed hanged himself from a tap in the bathroom with the help of a cloth at 5 pm at the common toilet area of the enclosure for mulahiza inmates [first-time offenders],” Director General (Prisons), Sanjay Baniwal told the newspaper.

Earlier in the day, Jawed was convicted by an additional sessions judge in a 2016 robbery case registered at Delhi’s Malviya Nagar police station.

“He was reportedly crying after coming from the court,” an unidentified jail official told the Hindustan Times. “Later in the evening, he went to the bathroom, where he hanged himself with a very thick cord, made by twisting together several thinner clothes. Nobody could notice it as toilets and bathrooms are not covered under CCTV surveillance in Tihar.”

A judicial inquiry has been initiated into the incident, reported the Hindustan Times.

Monday’s development comes weeks after jailed gangster Sunil Mann alias Tillu Tajpuriya was allegedly killed by rival gang members inside Delhi’s Tihar Jail.

According to the police, a prisoner named Yogesh and other members of a rival gang attacked Tajpuriya…