Tag: collapse

  • Morbi bridge collapse: Oreva Group MD denied interim bail

    Morbi bridge collapse: Oreva Group MD denied interim bail

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    Morbi: A court on Tuesday rejected jailed Oreva Group managing director Jaysukh Patel’s plea for interim bail, which he had sought to complete the formalities to pay compensation to the victims of last year’s collapse of a suspension bridge in Gujarat’s Morbi town, in which 135 people were killed.

    The court of principal district and sessions judge P C Joshi here dismissed Patel’s interim bail plea, which was opposed by both the state government and family members of the victims.

    The Ahmedabad-headquartered Oreva Group was responsible for the operation and maintenance of the ill-fated British-era bridge on the Machchhu river, which collapsed on October 30 last year, killing 135 persons and injuring 56 others.

    Patel, one of the 10 accused arrested in the case, had filed a plea seeking temporary release from jail for 15 to 20 days to complete the formalities required to pay compensation to the families of the deceased and those injured in the crash as per the Gujarat High Court’s February 22 order.

    The high court had directed the company to pay Rs 10 lakh as interim compensation to the kin of each deceased and Rs 2 lakh to each injured within four weeks.

    During arguments in the sessions court last week, the state government had opposed Patel’s plea and said the company itself came forward with the offer to pay compensation to the victims, and it should be assumed it was ready with the financial arrangement required for the payment.

    The government also submitted that the high court’s direction on compensation was for the Oreva Group and not its promoters, and the company has continued to operate even when Patel was jailed.

    The lawyer for the families of the victims stated that if released on bail, the businessman may try to influence witnesses of the case.

    The Oreva Group had made an offer before the high court to pay an ‘interim’ compensation totaling Rs 5 crore to the kin of those who lost their lives and those injured in the collapse.

    The 10 accused arrested in the case are currently lodged in Morbi sub- jail under judicial custody.

    Patel, who was shown as an accused in a chargesheet filed by the police, had been absconding for three months and surrendered before a court on January 31.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Two Injured In Bridge Collapse

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    SRINAGAR: A bridge over rivulet in Mahore area of Reasi collapsed when two loaded dumpers were crossing on it last evening, officials said.

    Bridge
    Bridge collapses in Reasi

    Quoting officials news agency GNS reported that both the dumpers, one having registration number JK02CW-9495 and other one without registration plate, fell in Badora rivulet connecting Mahore and Chassan Tehsils.

    Drivers of the vehicles, identified as Amjid Khan and Showkat Ali, both residents of Kotranka Rajouri, were injured and were shifted to hospital by rescuers including police.

    SDM Mazahir Hussein Shah confirmed the collapsing of the bridge and injuries to drivers as well as damage to the dumpers.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Guj court rejects bail pleas of seven accused in Morbi bridge collapse case

    Guj court rejects bail pleas of seven accused in Morbi bridge collapse case

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    Morbi: A court here on Saturday rejected the bail applications of seven people arrested in connection with the collapse of a suspension bridge in Morbi town of Gujarat, in which 135 people were killed.

    The court of principal sessions judge P C Joshi refused to grant bail to the seven accused, including two managers of Oreva Group, the company which was given the contract for operation and maintenance of the bridge.

    The British-era bridge on Machchhu river collapsed on October 30, 2022, days after it was reopened following repairs.
    Jaysukh Patel, the managing director of Oreva Group, had surrendered before a court here on February 1 before his arrest.

    The Morbi police had last week filed a chargesheet in the case, in which 10 persons have been arrested so far, including Patel.

    The other nine arrested persons include two managers of the firm, two ticket-booking clerks, three security guards and two sub-contractors who were engaged for the repair works by Oreva Group.

    The bail pleas of these nine persons were rejected earlier by the Gujarat High Court and sessions court. Except the two sub-contractors, the other seven once again approached court for bail on Thursday.

    Earlier, a special investigation team (SIT), which was formed by the state government to probe the collapse, had cited several lapses on the part of the firm.

    Nearly 250 persons were on the hanging bridge, a popular tourist site, when it caved in.

    According to the SIT, the lapses included lack of restriction on the number of persons accessing the bridge and no curb on sale of tickets, which led to unrestricted movement on the structure, and carrying out repairs without consulting experts.

    The probe had revealed the new metal flooring done by the firm had increased the weight of the structure and it had failed to change the rusted cables on which the entire bridge was hanging.

    Apart from this, the contractors hired by Patel’s firm were not qualified to carry out such repair and renovation work, the SIT stated.

    The probe report also revealed the Oreva Group did not hire any expert agency to assess the load-bearing capacity of the carriageway before throwing it open to the public after repair and renovation work.

    The prosecution had earlier informed the lower court that the firm had sold 3,165 tickets on the day of the collapse alone and there was no coordination between ticket booking offices on both sides of the bridge.

    All 10 accused, including Jaysukh Patel, have been charged under the Indian Penal Code sections 304 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder), 308 (attempt to commit culpable homicide), 336 (act which endangers human life), 337 (causing hurt to any person by doing any rash or negligent act) and 338 (causing grievous hurt by doing rash or negligent act).

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Morbi bridge collapse: Oreva group MD Jaysukh Patel sent in 7-day police custody

    Morbi bridge collapse: Oreva group MD Jaysukh Patel sent in 7-day police custody

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    Morbi: A court in Gujarat’s Morbi town on Wednesday sent managing director of Oreva Group Jaysukh Patel in seven-day police custody in a case related to the Morbi suspension bridge collapse which claimed 135 lives last year.

    Chief Judicial Magistrate M J Khan sent Patel in the custody of the special investigation team (SIT) formed by the state government to probe the case till February 8.

    The SIT had sought a 14-day remand, government prosecutor Sanjay Vora told reporters.

    As many as 135 people were killed and many others injured when a suspension bridge on a river collapsed in Gujarat’s Morbi town on October 30, 2022.

    Patel, whose company was responsible for the operation and maintenance of the bridge, surrendered before the court on Tuesday evening after the court issued an arrest warrant against him. He was later arrested by the police.

    As part of maintenance, the company carried out only cosmetic repairs of the bridge rather than changing the cable wires, the prosecution told the court, Vora said.

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    #Morbi #bridge #collapse #Oreva #group #Jaysukh #Patel #7day #police #custody

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Morbi bridge collapse: Oreva group MD Jaysukh Patel sent to 7-day police custody

    Morbi bridge collapse: Oreva group MD Jaysukh Patel sent to 7-day police custody

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    Morbi: A court in Gujarat’s Morbi town on Wednesday sent managing director of Oreva Group Jaysukh Patel in seven-day police custody in a case related to the Morbi suspension bridge collapse which claimed 135 lives last year.

    Chief Judicial Magistrate M J Khan sent Patel in the custody of the special investigation team (SIT) formed by the state government to probe the case till February 8.

    The SIT had sought a 14-day remand, government prosecutor Sanjay Vora told reporters.

    As many as 135 people were killed and many others injured when a suspension bridge on a river collapsed in Gujarat’s Morbi town on October 30, 2022.

    Patel, whose company was responsible for the operation and maintenance of the bridge, surrendered before the court on Tuesday evening after the court issued an arrest warrant against him. He was later arrested by the police.

    As part of maintenance, the company carried out only cosmetic repairs of the bridge rather than changing the cable wires, the prosecution told the court, Vora said.

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    #Morbi #bridge #collapse #Oreva #group #Jaysukh #Patel #7day #police #custody

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • HC gives Bengaluru Metro two weeks to respond on pillar collapse accident

    HC gives Bengaluru Metro two weeks to respond on pillar collapse accident

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    Bengaluru: The High Court of Karnataka on Tuesday ordered issuing of notices to Bengaluru Metro Rail Corporation Limited (BMRCL) and others in a public interest litigation taken on its own over the death of two persons due to the collapse of an under-construction metro pillar here.

    The BMRCL was given two weeks’ time to respond to the court.

    The state government, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), the BMRCL chief engineer and Nagarjuna Construction Company Limited are the other respondents in the case.

    The High Court had initiated the suo-moto (on its own) PIL on January 13 following the death of software engineer Tejaswini and her two-year-old son when the pillar pier collapsed on the two-wheeler they were travelling in, near Hennur main road in the city on January 10.

    The division bench of Justice Alok Aradhe and Justice S Vishwajith Shetty heard the petition that the court had itself directed the Registrar General to initiate.

    While initiating the PIL earlier this month, the High Court had said it was taking cognisance of news reports about the incident. “These news items prompted us to take cognisance of the incident referred to wherein there is an unfortunate death of a lady and toddler son at the condition of roads, the issue raises concern and question for the public at large.”

    Meanwhile, the BMRCL had suspended three engineers and issued notices to its contractor Nagarjuna Construction Company. The police had booked nine persons including officials of BMRCL.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Crypto collapse spurs calls for new rules to crack down on abuse

    Crypto collapse spurs calls for new rules to crack down on abuse

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    20230123 senate francis 5

    The clashes in bankruptcy and civil courts vindicate industry skeptics like Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler, who have long warned that crypto businesses are defying basic rules that would protect retail investors and traders.

    They are also fueling calls to enforce the laws and regulations that are currently on the books, which the industry has fiercely resisted.

    “There are a lot of regulatory tools out there already to deal with that,” Warren said in an interview. “We need regulators to use those tools, and Congress needs to make sure that those regulators have the resources they need to be an effective cop on the beat.”

    The legal conflicts are injecting even more uncertainty into a market that has lost two-thirds of its value since November 2021. For retail traders and customers — including those who were enticed into risky lending products with promises of secure and reliable investment returns — there is no safety net.

    The battles over the corporate remains of once high-flying digital asset startups may take years to resolve. More litigation is in the offing as the contagion that emerged last spring wends its way through the markets.

    “In traditional finance, there are means and mechanisms to wind down institutions. On the crypto asset side, because it grew so quickly — in a space that had a light touch regulation — you don’t have the same kinds of well-established procedures,” said John Rizzo, a former U.S. Treasury official who’s now a senior vice president of public affairs at Clyde Group.

    Some crypto businesses that have gone under-operated as banks, brokers, custodians and agents for their customers — a combination of services that doesn’t exist at regulated financial institutions — making their bankruptcy proceedings even more chaotic.

    Bankrupt lending platforms like Celsius Network and Voyager Digital solicited customers with investment products that guaranteed double-digit yields in exchange for crypto deposits. FTX’s marketing campaigns assured crypto traders that its exchange offered a safe venue for buying, selling and storing digital tokens.

    But those customers were locked out of their accounts when those platforms ran into trouble. They now have to compete in bankruptcy court with major creditors who secured massive loans to those businesses.

    “The likelihood that these individuals are going to ever be made whole is distilled down to almost nothing,” said Martin Auerbach, a former federal prosecutor who leads the white collar and investigations practice at the law firm Withers.

    Gensler has already started to lay down the hammer on the industry. The SEC this month charged the crypto exchange Gemini and a widely used brokerage known as Genesis Global with securities law violations in connection to a lending product that froze roughly $1 billion of customer assets after the downfall of Bahamas-based FTX.

    Genesis had used Gemini customer assets to issue loans to groups like Alameda Research, the personal hedge fund of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, as well as the defunct hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, according to the SEC. Genesis, which is owned by the crypto behemoth Digital Currency Group (DCG), declared bankruptcy a week after the SEC announced its charges, and Gemini, which is led by the Winklevoss twins, is the subject of a class action lawsuit.

    “It’s devastating,” said Hee-Jean Kim, an attorney who’s leading the class action case against Gemini. “People really felt this was safe.”

    Gemini and the Winklevoss twins, who accused DCG and Genesis of accounting fraud in a public letter, did not respond to requests for comment. DCG has waved off the allegations as a publicity stunt. Genesis also did not respond to requests for comment.

    Meanwhile, as multibillion-dollar failures cascade across the industry, the survivors are scrapping over a dwindling pool of assets that remain.

    “The crypto ecosystem right now is working towards solutions through the markets and market forces with no government bailouts and no government assistance,” Mike Katz, the vice president and head of legal at DCG, told POLITICO prior to Genesis’s bankruptcy.

    The calamity in crypto markets has been “a terrible outcome for unsophisticated people, but customers wanted their return,” said Brown Rudnick bankruptcy group partner William Baldiga, who’s advising Bahamian officials on the FTX restructuring. “If you’re going to promise customers 6 percent, 12 percent return, how is the company going to make the money to give them those returns? Well, too often, only by gambling with the funds the customer gave you.”

    “You get in the hole, some people keep digging,” he said.

    Crypto trading platforms and brokerages are highly interconnected, so when one company’s investments go south, those losses are felt by its lenders and business partners.

    That problem became acute in mid-2022 after a widely used crypto token lost its value and pushed one of its backers, hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, into liquidation.

    Others soon followed. Celsius Network and Voyager Digital, two trading platforms where millions of retail customers held accounts, both declared bankruptcy in July. Genesis, which had loaned almost $2.4 billion to Three Arrows, wobbled in the market downturn until DCG arranged to absorb some of the losses.

    That was only a dress rehearsal for FTX’s main event. Exposure to Bankman-Fried’s investment empire, which included dozens of exchanges, digital startups and venture capital investments, paralyzed Genesis and other crypto businesses that survived the initial downturn.

    With regulators circling and crypto asset values plummeting, FTX’s bankruptcy and the restructuring proceedings for Three Arrows, Celsius, Voyager and the crypto lender BlockFi’s assets became critical venues for creditors to recover their losses.

    “The domino effect is extensive, in part because FTX had positioned itself as such a successful and dominant player in the market,” said Auerbach. When a market pillar of that size falls, he said, “the ripples and waves are … dramatic.”

    Celsius, FTX, Three Arrows and Genesis did not respond to requests for comment.

    FTX’s restructuring team says it has recovered more than $5 billion from Bankman-Fried’s ruined empire, but it’s far from clear if that will be enough to compensate millions of customers and creditors whose funds were lost when the platform imploded last year.

    Meanwhile, a new ruling in Celsius Network’s bankruptcy determined that customers will be at the back of the line for any claims on its assets. Federal authorities have warned about Voyager’s sale of its assets to Binance.US — a deal the company’s restructuring team pursued after FTX’s planned acquisition of the portfolio was derailed by its collapse.

    Even if Binance.US completes its acquisition of Voyager’s assets, Voyager isn’t making any assurances that its customers will see the value of their accounts restored.

    “It’s a whack-a-mole problem,” Rizzo said. “You make one party whole, and then here’s less resources for another party.”

    Zachary Warmbrodt contributed to this story.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Lucknow house collapse: Rescue operations end, 3rd body retrieved

    Lucknow house collapse: Rescue operations end, 3rd body retrieved

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    Lucknow: The rescue operations in the house collapse incident here have finally ended with the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) and the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) teams retrieving a body of a 42-year-old woman, increasing the overall toll to three.

    Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police, Central Zone, Rajesh Srivastava, identified the body to be of Shabana Khatoon from Unnao.

    The SDRF said that from relatives they got to know that the woman was a resident of flat number 201.

    Lucknow Police Commissioner S.B. Shirodkar said that with the third body’s recovery, the last person had been traced.

    “The debris will continue to be removed. As per our information, there were 17 people inside the five-story building when it gave way and all have been brought out,” he said.

    On Wednesday morning, the rescue teams had pulled out Uzma Haider, 35, and Begum Haider, 75, the wife of senior Congress leader Amir Haider and mother of Samajwadi Party spokesperson Abbas Haider.

    Trapped for over 15 hours, both were rescued alive on Wednesday morning but died during treatment at Civil Hospital.

    An FIR was registered at Hazratganj police station on Wednesday against builder Nawajish Shahid, who is the son of SP MLA Shahid Manzoor, his cousin Mohammad Tariq and Fahad Yazdani under sections 323 (voluntarily causing hurt), 308 (attempt to commit culpable homicide), 420 (fraud), 120B (criminal conspiracy) of the IPC and section 7 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act.

    The district administration said that the debris at the site of the incident was being cleared and the belonging of the residents was being handed over to them after due identification.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Pakistan’s economy at risk of collapse

    Pakistan’s economy at risk of collapse

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    Karachi: British publication Financial Times has warned that Pakistan’s economy is at risk of collapse with the government’s “failure to revive” an International Monetary Fund (IMF) deal, Geo News reported.

    According to the report, rolling blackouts and a severe foreign currency shortage are making it difficult for businesses to continue operations.

    Shipping containers full of imports are piling up at ports as the buyers are unable to secure the dollars to pay for them, it added, Geo News reported.

    “Associations for airlines and foreign companies have warned that they have been blocked from repatriating dollars by capital controls imposed to protect dwindling foreign reserves. Officials said that factories such as textile manufacturers were closing or cutting hours to conserve energy and resources. The difficulties were compounded by a nationwide blackout on Monday that lasted more than 12 hours,” reported the UK newspaper.

    “Already a lot of industries have closed down, and if those industries don’t restart soon, some of the losses will be permanent,” said the founder of Macro Economic Insights, Sakib Sherani, Geo News reported.

    Citing analysts, Financial Times reported that Pakistan’s economic situation is “becoming untenable”, and maybe in a similar situation as Sri Lanka if the situation persists. The publication also warned that if the “situation persists” then the country may default in May.

    “Every day matters now. It’s simply not clear what the way out is,” said Abid Hasan, a former advisor to the World Bank, adding, “Even if they get a billion [dollars] or two to roll over, things are so bad that it’s going to be just a band-aid at best.”

    Pakistan’s Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal told the FT that the country has “drastically” reduced imports in an attempt to conserve dollars.

    “If we just comply with the IMF conditionalities, as they want, there will be riots in the streets. We need a staggered programme… The economy and society cannot absorb the shock or cost of a front-loaded programme,” Iqbal said.

    Following the Pakistani rupee’s devaluation in the open and interbank markets, the benchmark index of the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) rallied and gained by more than 1,000 points, Geo News reported.

    Commenting on the development, Arif Habib Limited’s Head of Research, Tahir Abbas, said that the rupee’s steep fall has triggered a positive sentiment in the market.

    “The driving factor behind the market is the rupee’s market-based exchange rate. This has helped clear the uncertainty that was surrounding the investors,” Abbas said, Geo News reported.

    The analyst said that the government’s steps are helping the market recover and increasing the confidence of the investors – who were in a difficult position due to the uncertainty over the revival of the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) programme.

    Abbas added that with a mini-budget expected within the next eight to 10 days, the tariffs of gas and electricity might also witness an increase and more taxes might be be imposed – also the global money lender’s conditions.

    The Pak rupee posted its biggest single-day decline against the dollar in more than two decades, after rapidly depleting foreign exchange reserves and an unyielding IMF forcing the government to relax its grip on the currency, The News reported.

    Following the government’s decision to end its control over the rupee-dollar exchange rate as part of the IMF condition, the Pak currency slid 9.61 per cent, or Rs 24.5, to a record low of Rs 255.43 against the US dollar compared to Wednesday’s close of Rs 230.89.

    The over 9 per cent decline was its highest since October 30, 1999, when the currency had slumped 9.4 per cent.

    “The State Bank of Pakistan is seemingly adjusting the exchange rate to the market rate – closer to open market to address the widening difference between the official and open market rate and to curb the flow of dollars through the informal market,” said Saad Ali, a capital market expert, The News reported.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UP: Four-year-old girl killed as six houses collapse in Agra

    UP: Four-year-old girl killed as six houses collapse in Agra

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    Agra: A four-year-old girl was killed and a few others were injured as six houses collapsed in Agra in Uttar Pradesh Thursday morning due to excavation work in a nearby dharamshala, police said.

    According to Deputy Commissioner of Police (City) Vikas Kumar, the incident took place around 7 am.

    Excavation work was going on in a dharamshala in Tila Maithan locality near Agra City Railway Station. Under its impact, six houses and one temple collapsed, the police officer said.

    “Three persons were trapped under the debris. They were identified as Vivek Kumar and his two daughters — Videhi (5) and Rusali (4),” the police officer said.

    They were taken to a hospital where Rusali died.

    Manoj Verma, another resident whose house collapsed in the incident, told PTI, “With the grace of god the incident happened in the morning when very few people were in their houses. Had it happened at night, many people would have been trapped.”

    The police officer said they are investigating the matter.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )