Tag: Bomb

  • Janhvi Kapoor charges bomb for 2nd project in Hyderabad

    Janhvi Kapoor charges bomb for 2nd project in Hyderabad

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    Hyderabad: Janhvi Kapoor, a Bollywood actress, will star alongside superstar Ram Charan in the upcoming Telugu film RC16. As mentioned, the actress is making her film debut in Jr NTR’s ‘NTR 30’. She’s been waiting for her big break in the Tollywood industry.

    Ram Charan Janhvi Kapoor

    Do you know how much the actress charges for the RC 16? Are there any guesses?

    While the news of her casting has already created a stir in the industry, reports indicate that Janhvi will be paid a whopping Rs. 6 crores for her role in the film.
     
    This news has shocked the industry because it is unusual for an actress with only a few films under her belt to command such a high fee. Janhvi, on the other hand, has proven that she has what it takes to be a leading lady in any industry with her outstanding performances in films such as Dhadak and Gunjan Saxena: The Kargil Girl.

    MS Education Academy

    The release of RC16, which is expected to be an action-packed blockbuster, is eagerly anticipated by fans. The film is sure to be a hit with audiences thanks to Ram Charan’s star power and Janhvi’s talent. The news of Janhvi’s fee only adds to the excitement surrounding the project, as it demonstrates that the producers are willing to invest in top talent to make this a success.

    On the work front, Janvi is currently working on her upcoming films NTR 30, Mr and Mrs Mahi.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad: Bomb hoax at private office in Madhapur

    Hyderabad: Bomb hoax at private office in Madhapur

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    Hyderabad: A hoax bomb call at a private company in Madhapur created panic as an unidentified person called up and informed that a bomb has been planted within the office’s premises.

    Upon receiving the threat, the officials took immediate action and called anti-sabotage teams and the bomb disposal squad to search for the bomb.

    The search teams rushed to the office and conducted a thorough search before declaring it a hoax.

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    During the search operation, employees were evacuated from the building as a precautionary measure.

    However, no bomb was found bringing relief to the employees.

    Police have registered a case after the company officials raised a complaint against the unidentified caller.

    Also, the cops suspect that a former employee of the office might be the person who passed the fake information to cause panic in the office.

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    #Hyderabad #Bomb #hoax #private #office #Madhapur

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Security Forces in huddle at South Kashmir: Strategy devised to counter Vehicle-borne IED, sticky bomb threat

    Security Forces in huddle at South Kashmir: Strategy devised to counter Vehicle-borne IED, sticky bomb threat

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    Jahangeer Ganai

    Anantnag, Apr 29: Close on the heels of deadly attack on army vehicle at Bhata-Durian area of Poonch on April 21 that left five soldiers’ dead, to security officials Saturday were in a huddle in Southern district of Anantnag to devise counter strategy to foil vehicle-borne IED and sticky bomb threats. In the meeting, Convoy movement was upgraded and a “fresh plan was devised for national highway security.”

    The meeting was chaired by the ADGP Kashmir Vijay Kumar and attended by top officials of army, CRPF, BSF, SSB and other security agencies. Officials privy to the meeting told the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), that the meeting discussed vehicle borne IED threat and other potential threats from militants that include sticky bombs etc.

    “All the officers/officials put forth their suggestions on how to counter vehicle-based IED and sticky bomb threats. Other possible militant threats were also discussed and a joint strategy devised to foil all the bids by the militants,” the official said, wishing not to be quoted. He said that in the meeting many officials admitted that vehicle-borne IEDs and sticky bombs were a challenge. The official said that a joint strategy was needed to counter both the emerging threats effectively.

    A source privy to the meeting told KNO that the meeting evolved a consensus that security on national highways needs to be given a special focus. “Night patrolling and area domination will be increased on highways forthwith,” he said.

    Present in the meeting were army’s GoC Victor Force Maj General Prashant Srivastava, IG CRPF Kashmir Ops Sector M S Bhatia, IG BSF Ashok Yadav, Joint Director IB, Army’s sector commanders in South Kashmir, DIGs of police, CRPF, SSB, ITBP & CID and SSPs of Anantnag, Pulwama, Kulgam and Awantipora.

    A police spokesman said that during the meeting, potential threats from militants on national highways were discussed in detail and more counter measures were decided. “Standard Operating Procedure (SoP) of convoy movement were also discussed and accordingly upgraded. All field officers gave their assessment. ADGP Kashmir instructed all SSPs to focus on anti-militant operations, busting of militant modules by apprehending terrorist associates,” the spokesman said.

    He said that they were specially tasked to generate preventive intelligence and share timely amongst all stakeholders. “GoC Victor force asked sector commanders to do extensive area domination in night too,” the spokesman said—(KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • 2008 Bengaluru bomb blast prime accused gets breather as SC relaxes bail condition

    2008 Bengaluru bomb blast prime accused gets breather as SC relaxes bail condition

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    Prime accused in the 2008 serial bomb blasts case Abdul Nazir Maudany received a breather from the Supreme Court of India after it relaxed the former’s bail conditions.

    Maudany, chairman of the Kerala People’s Democratic Party (PDP), has been allowed to stay in Kerala till July 8. His previous bail condition required him to stay in Bengaluru till the case was over.

    The court made the decision on the basis of Maudany’s health status and his ailing parents.

    MS Education Academy

    “Looking to the applicant’s own medical condition as well as his ailing parents who are residing in the State of Kerala, as an interim measure, consider it appropriate to order that the applicant be allowed to visit the State of Kerala for a period upto 8th July, 2023 to meet his ailing parents accompanied by the Karnataka Police Escort and return in the same manner,” the bench ordered while listing the next hearing on July 10.

    However, the Karnataka Government lawyer opposed the Maudany plea seeking relaxation and said that according to the public prosecutor handling the blast case, the proceedings in the matter will take another two months to conclude.

    This is the second time Maudany applied for a relaxation of his bail. His first plea was rejected in September 2021.

    In 2008, as many as eight serial bomb blasts took place in Bengaluru, killing three people and injuring over 20.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Bomb squad diffuses rusted mortar shell defused in Jammu

    Bomb squad diffuses rusted mortar shell defused in Jammu

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    Jammu: A rusted mortar shell was found in a forest area on the outskirts of Jammu on Saturday, officials said, adding it was defused by the bomb disposal squad.

    Special Police Officer Sunil Kumar noticed the mortar shell lying in Shivalikpuram forest area near Janipur Colony and informed the local police station about it, the officials said.

    A police party rushed to the scene and the mortar shell was later safely defused by the bomb disposal squad, they said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Kerala: RSS worker loses palms while making bomb

    Kerala: RSS worker loses palms while making bomb

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    A 20-year-old RSS worker suffered severe burn injuries while making a bomb near Eranjolipalam in Kerala‘s Kannur district on Tuesday night.

    Vishnu lost both his palms in the incident. According to locals, they heard an explosion near the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh worker’s house while making a bomb.

    Vishnu was rushed to the Kozhikode Medical College Hospital for urgent medical attention. Police are investigating the matter.

    MS Education Academy

    This is the second incident in April. Earlier this month, Santosh, a BJP worker in the Kakkayangad area of Kannur district was injured while making explosives. His wife Lasitha was also injured.

    Luckily Santosh’s children and mother were unharmed as they were in another room when the blast took place. A case was registered against the BJP worker.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Delhi school evacuated after bomb threat email; SWAT team arrives

    Delhi school evacuated after bomb threat email; SWAT team arrives

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    New Delhi: A private school in Delhi was evacuated after an email containing a bomb threat was received by the administration on Wednesday, a police official said.

    Authorities at The Indian School in Defence Colony told police that they received the email at 10.49 a.m.

    “The school has been evacuated and a thorough check is being done by a bomb squad,” the official added.

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    More details are awaited.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Japan prime minister vows to boost G7 security after smoke bomb attack

    Japan prime minister vows to boost G7 security after smoke bomb attack

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    japan kishida 21335

    Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said he would increase security at G7 meetings taking place in his country, a day after a man threw a smoke bomb at him at a campaign event.

    Kishida was campaigning Saturday ahead of next week’s by-elections for the Japanese parliament when an explosive device was hurled toward him. Footage on Twitter appeared to show a bodyguard kicking a smoke bomb away from the prime minister and bundling him away, after the device landed near them. A 24-year-old man was arrested at the scene.

    Japan will host the leaders of the Group of Seven most industrialized nations at a summit in Hiroshima next month.

    On Sunday, speaking after emerging unscathed from the smoke bomb incident, CNN quoted Kishida as saying: “Japan as a whole must strive to provide maximum security during the dates of the summit and other gatherings of dignitaries from around the world.”

    G7 foreign ministers are meeting Sunday for a three-day conference in Karuizawa, where they are expected to discuss China’s aggression toward Taiwan, Russia’s war in Ukraine, and North Korea’s missile testing. G7 climate ministers, meanwhile, are completing a two-day meeting in Sapporo.

    The Kishida incident had eerie echoes of the shocking assassination of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe last July.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • GOP embraces a new foreign policy: Bomb Mexico to stop fentanyl

    GOP embraces a new foreign policy: Bomb Mexico to stop fentanyl

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    Not all Republican leaders are behind this approach. John Bolton, Trump’s third national security adviser who’s weighing his own presidential run, said unilateral military operations “are not going to solve the problem.” And House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Mike McCaul (R-Texas), for example, is “still evaluating” the AUMF proposal “but has concerns about the immigration implications and the bilateral relationship with Mexico,” per a Republican staff member on the panel.

    But the eagerness of some Republicans to openly legislate or embrace the use of the military in Mexico suggests that the idea is taking firmer root inside the party. And it illustrates the ways in which frustration with immigration, drug overdose deaths and antipathy towards China are defining the GOP’s larger foreign policy.

    Nearly 71,000 Americans died in 2021 from synthetic-opioid overdoses — namely fentanyl — far higher than the 58,220 U.S. military personnel killed during the Vietnam War. And the Drug Enforcement Agency assessed in December that “most” of the fentanyl distributed by two cartels “is being mass-produced at secret factories in Mexico with chemicals sourced largely from China.”

    Democrats, meanwhile, are allergic to the Republican proposals. President Joe Biden doesn’t want to launch an invasion and has rejected the terrorist label for cartels. His team argues that two issued executive orders already expanded law-enforcement authorities to target transnational organizations.

    “The administration is not considering military action in Mexico,” National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson said. “Designating these cartels as foreign terrorist organizations would not grant us any additional authorities that we don’t already have.” Instead, Watson said the administration hopes to work with Congress on modernizing the Customs and Border Protection’s technologies and making fentanyl a Schedule I drug, which would impose the strictest regulations on its production and distribution.

    Gen. Mark Milley, the Joint Chiefs chair, told Defense One in an interview last month that invading Mexico was a bad idea. “I wouldn’t recommend anything be done without Mexico’s support,” he said, insisting that tackling the cartel-fueled drug trade is a law enforcement issue.

    But should a Republican defeat Biden in 2024, those ideas could become policy, especially if Trump — the GOP frontrunner — reclaims the Oval Office.

    As president, Trump considered placing cartels on the State Department’s terrorist blacklist. He also asked about using missiles to take out drug labs and cartels in Mexico, according to former Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, who wrote in his memoir that he rejected the idea at the time.

    But Trump backed away from the move because of the legal complications and fears that bombing Mexico could lead to increased asylum claims at the southern border.

    Now a candidate, Trump is reviving his hawkish instincts toward the drug lords. He has already vowed to deploy U.S. special forces to take on drug cartels, “just as we took down ISIS and the ISIS caliphate.”

    In one policy video released by his campaign, Trump said that if reelected, he would “order the Department of Defense to make appropriate use of special forces, cyber warfare, and other overt and covert actions to inflict maximum damage on cartel leadership, infrastructure and operations.”

    And during a recent presidential rally speech in Waco, Texas, Trump compared the number of deaths from fentanyl overdoses to a kind of military attack.

    “People talk about the people that are pouring in,” Trump said. “But the drugs that are pouring into our country, killing everybody, killing so many people — there’s no army that could ever do damage to us like that still.”

    Other 2024 candidates side with Trump. Using military force on cartels without Mexico’s permission “would not be the preferred option, but we would absolutely be willing to do it,” entrepreneur and conservative activist Vivek Ramaswamy said in an interview. What the cartels are doing “is a form of attack” on the United States, he added.

    Ramaswamy also said he backs an authorization for the use of military force for “specific” groups: “If those cartels meet the test for qualifying as a domestic terrorist organization for the purpose of freezing their assets, I think that qualifies them for the U.S. president to view them as an eligible target for the use of authorized military force.”

    Asa Hutchinson, the former Arkansas governor and among the more moderate foreign policy voices in his party, openly supports the foreign terrorist organization label for the cartels. “They meet the definition,” he said weeks before announcing his entrance into the 2024 field this month.

    Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is openly against any U.S. military involvement in his country to take on the cartels. “In addition to being irresponsible, it is an offense to the people of Mexico,” he said in March.

    But Waltz, who serves on the House Armed Services Committee, noted that Colombia’s government was initially resistant to the idea of U.S. military support, too, until both the Clinton and Bush administrations said they were going to send help anyway. “It was only once we delivered some tough messages that they started to shift,” he said, noting attitudes in Bogotá changed as the situation worsened in the country.

    Furthermore, Waltz contends that U.S. law enforcement is “overwhelmed by the magnitude of the problem by the capability of the cartels.” America should use military cyber weapons to disrupt cartel communications and money flow, he suggested, adding: “If we need some drone support along the border, that’s not something that a law enforcement agency can do, that’s something the military needs to help with.”

    But current and former U.S. foreign policy and military officials, including Republicans, say there are glaring problems with the military proposals. “If you thought Iraq was a bad situation, wait until you invade a country on our border,” a House Republican congressional aide said. “Our grandchildren will be dealing with this.”

    They cite two main concerns.

    The first is that U.S. Northern Command assesses that 30 to 35 percent of Mexican territory is ungoverned, giving space for the drug cartels to roam free. Should the U.S. launch military operations in Mexico, a crush of people would find their way to U.S. ports of entry seeking asylum and their claims would be stronger by fleeing an active war zone involving U.S.-labeled terrorists.

    “You’ve just legitimately made it harder to send thousands of people back,” the House GOP staffer said.

    The second issue is that while using force against drug cartels might impact the supply side of the fentanyl crisis, it doesn’t address demand. And past examples of the U.S. military working with a nation to combat drug groups, like in Colombia, were successful, in part, because the host country was committed to the fight and conducted the operations.

    There are other complications, such as what the terrorist label would mean for people selling drugs online or shipping them — would a FedEx delivery person be jailed? — and how to stop the sheer volume of imports to Mexico. The Mexican Navy can’t intercept it all, and U.S. forces asked to assist may only catch a small fraction more of what comes into the country.

    Still, Republicans see military options as a last-ditch effort to address the crisis roiling Mexico and the United States, and they will continue offering suggestions until a president agrees with them.

    “The worst thing we can do is continue to do nothing,” Waltz said.

    Meridith McGraw and Natalie Allison contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Trump’s tariff time bomb threatens to blow up transatlantic trade

    Trump’s tariff time bomb threatens to blow up transatlantic trade

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    BRUSSELS — The next big transatlantic trade fight is primed to explode.

    Negotiators from Brussels and Washington are scrambling to solve a five-year dispute over steel and aluminum dating back to former U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to slap tariffs on European imports. They have until October to get a deal but are still so far apart that European officials now fear the chances of an agreement are slim. 

    Without a deal, both sides could reimpose billions of dollars worth of trade tariffs on each other’s goods — potentially spreading well beyond steel to hit products including French wines, U.S. rum, vodka and denim jeans.

    While U.S. negotiators are still hopeful that an agreement can be reached in time, the political fallout of failure for President Joe Biden would be serious, with U.S. exports facing a hit just ahead of his potential re-election battle in 2024. More broadly, another breakdown in trade relations between Europe and the United States would heap further pressure on a relationship that is already under strain from Biden’s green subsidies package for American industries.  

    With a more assertive China threatening to disrupt supply lines, and Russia’s war in Ukraine straining global commerce, the last thing world trade needs is a new crisis between major Western allies. Six EU officials briefed on the talks worry that’s exactly what will happen. 

    “The start positions are just too far away,” said one of the officials, who asked to remain anonymous to discuss sensitive matters. “The huge concessions that would have to be made are politically not realistic in that timeframe.”

    The transatlantic disagreement is a hangover from the days of Trump, who imposed tariffs on €6.4 billion worth of European steel and exports in 2018. The tariffs were extra sensitive because Trump had imposed them on grounds of national security. 

    After he came to power, Biden agreed to a temporary cessation of hostilities rather than a complete end to the dispute. His aim was for negotiators to work jointly on making steel production greener and fighting global overcapacity. The unofficial U.S. goal is also to squeeze Beijing’s dumping of Chinese steel, which is made with far more coal-fired power. 

    But unless a new deal is struck by October, the risk is that tariffs return. A summit between Biden and EU leaders has now been penciled in for October, potentially to coincide with the final leg of talks on the dispute.

    China hawks

    Officials in Brussels see the ongoing negotiations as just another push from the U.S. to force them into taking a harder line against China. “The language just seems written to tackle one country specifically,” said one of the European officials.

    Discussions only recently picked up pace through the exchange of a U.S. concept paper and then an EU response. Those texts showed how far apart the two sides are on key issues, the officials said.

    Washington wants to impose tariffs on imported steel or aluminum products, which would increase progressively based on how carbon-intensive the manufacturing process is, according to the proposal seen by POLITICO. Countries that join the agreement, which would be open to nations outside the EU, would face lower tariffs, or none at all, compared to those that do not. 

    GettyImages 1476427726
    Former U.S. President Donald Trump at a rally at Waco airport | Brandon Bell/Getty Images

    The EU’s response — also seen by POLITICO — does not include any form of tariffs, according to the officials. Brussels fears the American plan for tariffs goes against the rules of the World Trade Organization, which is a no-go for the EU.

    But a senior Biden administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing negotiations, told POLITICO that tariffs should not be off the table. 

    “That’s a pretty powerful tool for driving the market both to reduce carbon intensity as well as to reset the playing field to counteract non-market practices and excess capacity,” the U.S. official said. “What we’ve been trying to understand and respond to, in part, is what are those reasons that the EU has to have concerns about a tariff-type structure.”

    Karl Tachelet, deputy director general of European steel association Eurofer, said: “We haven’t seen any real ambition or vision to use this as an opportunity to tackle excess capacity or decarbonization. So it can only lead to a clash of views.”

    Americans don’t see it that way.

    “The U.S. and the EU share a commitment to tackling the dual threat of non-market excess capacity and the climate crisis, and the Biden administration is committed to developing a high-ambition framework that accomplishes those objectives for our workers and these critical industries,” said Adam Hodge, spokesperson for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.

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    A student does steel work in Dayton, Ohio | Megan Jelinger/AFP via Getty Images

    But the senior Biden administration official argued that the EU proposal lacks ambition. It makes “tweaks around the margin” without actually attacking “the fundamental problem” that the two sides agreed to address when they called their truce. 

    “Our concern with the EU’s paper is that it doesn’t really change the dynamic of trade,” the U.S. official said.

    “If we’re going to change the course of the impact of non-market excess capacity on market economies like the U.S. and EU, as well as really thinking about how can we use trade as a tool to drive decarbonization, we need to produce something that’s different and more ambitious,” the official added.

    Several officials said Washington is also seeking an exemption from the EU’s carbon border tax, which imposes a tax on some imported goods to make sure European businesses are not undercut by cheaper products made in countries with weaker environmental rules.

    Such an exemption for the U.S. is another no-go for Brussels. A European Commission spokesperson said giving the U.S. a pass on the carbon border tax would constitute a breach of WTO rules and “cannot be compared with” the U.S. steel and aluminum measures. 

    GettyImages 1191977342
    Workers at LB Steel LLC in Illinois manufacture wheel assemblies for high-speed trains | Scott Olson/Getty Images

    Another European concern is that the U.S. wouldn’t scrap the possibility of re-imposing tariffs on the EU, even though the WTO branded them as illegal. Under Trump, Brussels argued only a complete withdrawal of the tariffs would satisfy the EU, contending the duties were an illegal slap in the face of an ally. 

    The senior U.S. official said that using national security to justify the tariffs — a rationale that would surely draw opposition in Brussels — “hasn’t been a part of our conversation with the EU to date.” But the Biden administration’s concept paper wasn’t written with WTO compliance top of mind, the official added. 

    Landing zone

    Brussels and Washington are now negotiating to find a landing zone. 

    “Both sides are coming from two different positions on this,” said one of the European officials, while stressing that “there is a mutual interest to find a solution.”

    Others were more pessimistic. Either way, a Plan B is taking shape in the background. Several of the European officials stressed the EU and the U.S. can also buy more time by prolonging the current ceasefire. “The deadline is always flexible,” said Uri Dadush, a Washington-based fellow at the Bruegel think tank. “Both sides can easily agree to extend.”

    Steven Overly reported from Washington. Sarah Anne Aarup and Camille Gijs contributed reporting from Brussels.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )