Tag: hurting

  • 1 held in UP for hurting religious sentiments by uploading video on social media: Police

    1 held in UP for hurting religious sentiments by uploading video on social media: Police

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    Bareilly: Police in this Uttar Pradesh district arrested a village head on Monday for allegedly hurting religious sentiments by uploading an objectionable video on a social media platform, an official said.

    According to police, Mohammad Arif alias Guddu, the “pradhan” of Bhikampur village located within the Bhojipura police station limits, had uploaded a video on Facebook that showed a temple flag being brought down and the hoisting of an Islamic flag there.

    Superintendent of Police (Rural) Raj Kumar Agarwal said the social media cell of the Bareilly police sent the video to the Bhojipura police station, which found out that it was Arif who had uploaded it.

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    Based on a complaint from Sub-Inspector Modi Singh, a case was registered against the accused under sections 295A (deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage religious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or religious beliefs) and 153 (wantonly giving provocation with intent to cause riot) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and provisions of the Information Technology Act.

    The SP said acting on a tip-off, police arrested Arif, who confessed that he had uploaded the video on Facebook.

    According to police, a number of cases are registered against Arif.

    The accused has been sent to jail, Agarwal said.

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    #held #hurting #religious #sentiments #uploading #video #social #media #Police

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • MP: Complaint filed on Badshah for hurting Hindu sentiments with song

    MP: Complaint filed on Badshah for hurting Hindu sentiments with song

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    Indore: A complaint was submitted to the police in Indore in Madhya Pradesh on Friday against singer Badshah for allegedly hurting the religious sentiments of people by using the word ‘Bholenath’ in a song that contains objectionable lyrics, a police official said.

    The complaint was submitted by an organisation called ‘Parshuram Sena’ and action will be taken after the allegations are investigated, MG Road police station in charge Santosh Singh said.

    The organisation’s lawyer Vinod Dwivedi claimed the lyrics of Badshah’s new song ‘Sanak’ contained objectionable lyrics and the use of the word ‘Bholenath’ had hurt the sentiments of the Hindus.

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    Some people also protested in front of MG Road police station and burnt an effigy of the 37-year-old artiste.

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Complaint #filed #Badshah #hurting #Hindu #sentiments #song

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Rajasthan HC orders stay on arrest of Ramdev accused of hurting religious sentiments

    Rajasthan HC orders stay on arrest of Ramdev accused of hurting religious sentiments

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    The Rajasthan High Court has stayed the arrest of Ramdev over an FIR registered against him for allegedly hurting religious sentiments and directed the yoga guru to appear before the investigating officer for questioning by May 20.

    Justice Manoj Kumar Garg gave the direction while hearing a petition by Ramdev seeking quashing of the FIR.

    The FIR was filed at the Chohtan police station in Barmer on February 5 on the complaint of Pathai Khan against the yoga guru’s alleged derogatory remarks against Islam and Christianity at a religious event in Barmer on February 2.

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    In provocative remarks at a meeting of seers, Yoga guru Ramdev had accused Muslims of resorting to terror and abducting Hindu women while comparing Hinduism to Islam and Christianity. He alleged that the two faiths were obsessed with conversion while Hinduism taught its followers to do good.

    In his complaint, Khan claimed that Ramdev had made his remarks “deliberately… so that there is animosity against Islam”.

    At the gathering of seers in Barmer, Ramdev had allegedly said, “Muslims offer namaz five times a day and then do whatever they want. They kidnap Hindu girls and commit all kinds of sins. Our Muslim brothers commit a lot of sins but they definitely offer namaz as they are taught to do so. Hindu religion is not like this.” A video of his speech had surfaced on social media.

    “I am not criticising anyone but people are obsessed only with this. Some people talk about converting the entire world to Islam and others want to convert the world to Christianity,” Ramdev said. He allegedly claimed that these faiths had no other agenda.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Uorfi Javed apologises for hurting sentiments with what she wears

    Uorfi Javed apologises for hurting sentiments with what she wears

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    New Delhi: Internet sensation Uorfi Javed has apologised to everyone for her dressing sense and said that she will be a changed Uorfi from now.

    Famous for her appearance on ‘Bigg Boss OTT’ and infamous for her choice of clothing, Uorfi was praised by Bollywood actress Kareena Kapoor for her style statements.

    The actress, though, lands more often in controversies because of her unusual fashion sense. Like recently she was spotted wearing a co-ord set that was made from a green practice net and along with it she also wore a gajra on her hair.

    If at one point she grabs the attention, many also raise questions on her bold style statement.

    Expressing apologies to all those who have problem with her dresses and the way she carry herself, Uorfi mentioned: “I apologise for hurting everyone’s sentiments by wearing what I wear. From now on you guys will see a changed Uorfi. Changed clothes. Maafi.”

    A number of Uorfi followers immediately reacted to her tweet. One of the social media users wrote: “Change DP first.” Another mentioned: “What…are you alright?” And someone else tweeted: “Why?”

    tweet 1641772756374274048 20230401 102222 via 10015 io

    Well, what Uorfi is planning to do next will be clear soon but she has left her fans guessing.

    On the work front, Uorfi most recently made an appearance on Rithvik Dhanjani’s show, ‘Datebaazi’. She was also seen in several TV shows including ‘Meri Durga’, ‘Bepannaah’, ‘Puncch Beat 2’, ‘Chandra Nandini’, ‘Saat Phero Ki Hera Pherie’, ‘Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai’ and ‘Kasautii Zindagii Kay’.

    She also participated in dating-based reality show ‘Splitsvilla X4’.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • If Rahul is disqualified, why not Modi for hurting women’s sentiment: TMC’s Abhishek

    If Rahul is disqualified, why not Modi for hurting women’s sentiment: TMC’s Abhishek

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    Kolkata: Senior TMC leader Abhishek Banerjee on Wednesday said if Rahul Gandhi can be disqualified for his comments about a community, then why similar action cannot be taken against Prime Minister Narendra Modi for hurting the sentiment of women by his taunts against Mamata Banerjee.

    Addressing a rally at Shahid Minar Grounds here, the Trinamool Congress national general secretary asked the party’s legal cell to file a case against the Leader of the Opposition in the West Bengal Assembly, Suvendu Adhikari, seeking his disqualification from the House for allegedly insulting a woman minister from the tribal community.

    Banerjee said he may not support Gandhi’s comment that led to his disqualification from the Lok Sabha following a court order, but he condemns the way it was done.

    “Why will the PM not be disqualified for hurting the sentiment of women by mocking West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee with his ‘Didi O Didi’ taunts during the 2021 assembly polls campaign? We demand that action be taken in that case too,” he said.

    The Diamond Harbour MP, who is also the nephew of party supremo Mamata Banerjee, asked his party leaders to file a case against Suvendu Adhikari for hurting the sentiments of the Scheduled Tribe community in the state.

    “Why will no action be taken against Adhikari for hurting the sentiment of the ST community for saying that minister Birbaha Hansda’s place was beneath his shoe? Does this not tantamount to insulting the STs? He, too, must be disqualified as an MLA,” he said.

    Banerjee referred to a viral video clip in which Adhikari was purportedly heard last year telling a group of people, “(TMC MLA) Debnath Hansda and Birbaha Hansda are kids. Their place is beneath my shoe.”

    PTI, however, could not verify the authenticity of the video clip. Birbaha Hansda had filed a police complaint against Adhikari.

    Lashing out at the BJP-led Union government for allegedly misusing the central agencies, the TMC leader said efforts are underway to malign the ruling party in West Bengal.

    “Today, we are here to protest against the Centre’s step-motherly attitude towards West Bengal. If the dues of the state are not cleared, I will stage a protest in New Delhi and fight for our rights. The Centre owes lakhs of crores of rupees to the state. You can’t scare me with the threat of ED and CBI. You can lodge as many as you want,” he added.

    Banerjee has been questioned by the ED in connection with a coal smuggling case.

    Referring to several corruption cases that have plagued the TMC government, Banerjee said if it is proved that some wrong has been committed, the law must take its own course.

    “But this pick-and-choose politics must stop. If you are a BJP member, you are above the law, but if you are from the TMC, you will be harassed and arrested. The law should not be different for the BJP,” he said.

    Banerjee said the TMC did not think twice before taking action against its senior Leader Partha Chatterjee when his alleged involvement in the teacher recruitment scam came out in the open last year.

    “Don’t hesitate to call yourself a TMC leader; rather, feel proud about it. Because it is the TMC, which has taken action against its senior Leader Partha Chatterjee within a week,” he said.

    Reacting to Banerjee’s accusations, BJP national vice-president Dilip Ghosh asked the TMC to move court if its any allegations against the saffron camp.

    “The allegations against the BJP are baseless. There is nothing wrong in calling a thief by his or her name,” Ghosh said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Dera Sacha Sauda chief booked for hurting religious sentiments

    Dera Sacha Sauda chief booked for hurting religious sentiments

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    Chandigarh: Dera Sacha Sauda chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh was booked on charges of hurting religious sentiments over his alleged objectionable comments on Guru Ravidas and Saint Kabir, police said on Thursday.

    The Jalandhar Rural police registered a case under section 295 A (deliberate and malicious intention of outraging the religious feelings of any class) of the Indian Penal Code on a complaint by Jassi Talhan, chief of the Guru Ravidas Tiger Force, at the Patara police station, they said.

    The complainant alleged that the dera chief, while on parole recently, made some objectionable comments on Guru Ravidas and Saint Kabir on February 5 which were shared through a YouTube channel.

    A police official said the FIR was lodged on March 7 and further investigations were underway.

    The dera chief, currently serving a 20-year jail term for raping two disciples, was granted a 40-day parole on January 20. He is lodged in Rohtak’s Sunaria prison in Haryana.

    In 2021, the dera chief, along with four others, was also convicted of hatching a conspiracy to kill Ranjit Singh, a dera manager. The dera chief and three others were also convicted in 2019 of the murder of a journalist more than 16 years ago.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘You’re hurting my country’: Manchin faces Europe’s wrath

    ‘You’re hurting my country’: Manchin faces Europe’s wrath

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    It was a charge that captured the wounded feelings and political frustrations of America’s allies in Europe after the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, H.R. 5376 (117), which included a mammoth program of clean-energy subsidies and made-in-America manufacturing rules that has thrown the transatlantic economic relationship into turmoil. Manchin, as the crucial fiftieth vote for the legislation and whose office wrote the controversial provisions, did more to shape the final version of the law than any legislator.

    Now, Manchin has marched into the den of the European elite, mingling at the World Economic Forum in Davos with an audience of continental technocrats, true-believing free traders and oligarchs more at ease in Monte Carlo than Morgantown, West Virginia, where Manchin played college football.

    The gulf in political and cultural sensibilities could scarcely have been starker.

    In the Swiss Alps, Manchin was determined to change the minds of men and women who see him as the face of a new American rival, the cause of a great rupture in transatlantic economic relations. Now, having made the trip across the Atlantic, he’s trying to put the pieces back together. He has been in one mode and one mode only here: sell, baby, sell.

    Manchin is unabashedly proud of his role in shaping the IRA, handing out one-pagers and telling stories about the people — some of them at Davos — who are already benefiting from it. But American allies like France and Germany see the $369 billion investment in energy security, including subsidies for climate and tech companies and incentives for consumers, as a frontal assault on European industry, a blunt-force instrument aimed at coercing companies to shift investments out of Europe and perhaps enter into energy and manufacturing deals in North America that they would not otherwise pursue.

    A new man about town

    In Washington, Manchin is among the most famous members of Congress. But now, the once-unknown, gum-chewing, no-nonsense West Virginian is infamous in Europe. European leaders, typically used to dealing with fellow heads of state, are now seeking facetime with the newfound Davos Man himself. They are getting plenty of it.

    Strolling into Anthony Scaramucci’s wine-tasting party in the Piano Bar of Hotel Europe on Tuesday night, Manchin had earlier that day come out of another grilling from a group of Europeans. He seemed more bemused than upset by the experience. He said he explained that the IRA is good for the U.S. and for the European allies.

    Did he convince anyone?

    Not really, he said, but he made his case.

    As snow fell on Davos Wednesday afternoon, Manchin joined the congressional delegation here for a quiet meeting with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, the leader of Europe’s largest economy. Manchin related to POLITICO that Scholz expressed frustration that the American law would directly harm German’s vital car market. The incentives would prove damaging to Germany and Europe and eventually spark a trade war, Scholz added.

    Manchin pushed back, saying there’s nothing stopping Germany from producing more cars in the United States — a point that wasn’t exactly a response to Scholz’s frustration.

    “I think it rubs him wrong when I say that,” the senator told POLITICO.

    Manchin said that Scholz countered that the U.S. places too many penalties on European cars entering the American market. So the West Virginian pulled out his cellphone and Googled “tariff cost on autos in Germany.” In bold, the search engine’s front page excerpted the relevant part of a 2019 Deutsche Welle article: “US levies a 2.5 percent tariff on European auto imports, while the European Union imposes a 10 percent duty.”

    A German government spokesman called Scholz’s conversation with Manchin and the other 11 lawmakers on the IRA a “direct exchange” that was “an expression of our close and good relationship with the USA.”

    Still, Manchin says his main message to Scholz — and Europe more broadly — is that “this piece of legislation was not intended to harm anybody. It was intended to keep America strong so we could help our friends. That’s it.”

    Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), the leader of the American congressional delegation in Davos, said the conversation with Scholz on the IRA was cordial and professional. But Coons, an experienced diplomat who sits on the Senate’s foreign relations committee, acknowledged there were clear differences.

    “We are optimistic we can find a way forward through this,” he said. “We have work to do to hear each other.”

    Nobody likes being the last to know

    Manchin is proud that he was able to have frank conversations with allies about a disagreement, having them learn from him and him learn from them. But he was surprised by the rancor and confusion he encountered from European officials who felt blindsided by America’s robust industrial policy.

    Manchin never heard from lobbies or governments about the controversial part of the law because his team drafted it in secret. No one, save for senior Democrats in the Senate, knew they were drafting the measure. Once it came to light, and proved the saving grace for President Joe Biden’s climate agenda, the legislative process moved so quickly that no one had time to react.

    “They just didn’t know,” Manchin said — but they know now.

    The initial confusion about the law in Europe gave way to rage and, soon after that, an aggressive policy response from EU and national leaders who are crafting their own program of large-scale support for clean-energy industry.

    The night the IRA passed last year, Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission’s president, issued a late-night tweet to congratulate Biden on the IRA’s passage in Congress. A few weeks later, her team was openly panicking about the IRA’s measures, particularly regarding subsidies on electric vehicles which it regarded as discriminatory.

    By the winter, when Macron clashed with Manchin in Washington, European leaders grasped that the American energy law could have sweeping unintended consequences for their own countries. Manchin said that when Macron approached him, the French leader decried the investments that were leaving other parts of the world — including Europe — and flooding into the United States.

    According to Manchin’s recollection, he countered by telling Macron that the U.S. took the approach to incentivize its way to energy security while France and Europeans chose to tax their way to it. The American approach “attracts people from all over the world” to work on hydrogen, small nuclear reactors and battery storage, Manchin recalled saying.

    He said he told Macron: “I will sit down and work with you in any way, shape or form to relieve your concerns and fears that we’re trying to basically do any harm to you or your society.”

    A French official with direct knowledge of the exchange confirmed it, noting the president “explained very calmly our serious concerns.”

    Sticking to his guns

    Worries have continued mounting in Europe, and Manchin has not always worked hard to ease them.

    At a dinner Manchin and his congressional colleagues had with Xavier Bettel, Luxembourg’s prime minister, at Davos this week, the leader raised Europe’s concerns about the IRA, particularly in light of the spiking cost of energy due to Russia’s war in Ukraine, a person familiar with the conversation said. Manchin argued that Luxembourg would see those prices fall if the country entered into long-term contracts with U.S.-based producers.

    Those kinds of comments are likely to alienate the EU even further, confirming the view in Brussels that American natural gas producers are poised to benefit from EU’s energy woes as the bloc tries to wean off Russian energy.

    Asked about the dinner with lawmakers, Bettel said “Luxembourg remains committed to keep up the dialogue with our U.S. friends around European concerns including IRA and energy security,” adding his country informed the European Commission about the dialogue he had with Manchin and others.

    Manchin was not the only American struck by the intensity of European leaders’ resentment over the legislation, which some suggested was misplaced.

    “Over the last couple of decades our friends in Europe have encouraged the United States to address climate change, and now we’re doing it in a major way and some are criticizing the way we’re doing it,” said Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), chair of the EU Caucus on Capitol Hill who is part of the U.S. delegation in Davos.

    “This bill took a year and a half,” said Boyle. “I’m chair of the congressional EU caucus; pretty much every week I am meeting with fellow parliamentarians and EU countries. Not once — ever — was it expressed to me by any European official of any country that they had problems or concerns with any specific aspect of the Inflation Reduction Act that were being discussed publicly.”

    But European officials say they were annoyed to have learned about it first in the media. After all, the U.S. and the EU had just barely over a year before set up a new body — called the Trade and Technology Council – for the express purpose of coordinating on such policies.

    Crisis mode

    EU officials are now scrambling to find some way out of the conundrum inflicted on them by the IRA, particularly the bill’s provisions on electric vehicles, which gave favorable treatment to Mexico and Canada, but not the EU. A leader of an EU country, who didn’t want to be named, said this week that, “We are confident that by raising it we can make sure the U.S. does the right thing.”

    The European Commission established a “task-force” in October led by Von der Leyen’s chief of staff Bjoern Seibert and deputy national security adviser Mike Pyle to explore options. In particular, they are trying to ensure that the local provisions part of the law which allows manufacturers from Mexico and Canada to benefit from tax breaks, could also apply to Europe.

    But there isn’t great hope in Europe at this point that the United States will fundamentally change the offending provisions of the IRA. U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai said following a meeting with Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis in Brussels this week that the EU needed to be “realistic” about resolving concerns.

    Manchin said he is open to addressing any suggestions the Europeans may have, working with them closely to ensure there isn’t a brutal fight to win the technological race toward a new energy economy.

    It’s unclear how much power he’ll have now that Democrats have a 51-member majority in the Senate, rather than the 50-50 split that regularly gave Manchin the swing vote. And with Republicans in control of the House of Representatives, the prospects look dim for major legislation on complex subjects.

    For now, Manchin is looking forward to resting on his flight home and shifting out of sales mode — at least for now.

    “I didn’t know it would be this intense, to be honest with you,” he said.

    Burgess Everett, Matt Kaminski, Jakob Hanke Vela, Hans von der Burchard and Ryan Heath contributed to this report.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )