Tag: skeletons

  • BJP attacking Rahul Gandhi to hide their skeletons: Digvijaya Singh

    BJP attacking Rahul Gandhi to hide their skeletons: Digvijaya Singh

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    Gwalior: Senior Congress leader Digvijaya Singh on Sunday claimed Rahul Gandhi rightly called the “absconders” associated with Prime Minister Narendra Modi “thieves” but the BJP is projecting his remarks as anti-OBC.

    He claimed not a single person from Other Backward Classes (OBC) turned “absconder” after taking the country’s money.

    “Absconders are those people who are associated with the BJP and (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi. Rahul Gandhi has rightly called them thieves. What crime has he committed by raising the issue of Rs 20,000 crore in Adani’s (industrialist Gautam Adani) companies,” Singh asked while talking to reporters.

    After Rahul Gandhi was disqualified as an MP after a court in Surat convicted him in a criminal defamation case over his “Modi surname” remark, BJP staged protests across the country claiming the Congress leader had insulted the OBCs.

    “Tell me the name of any OBC who had run away to foreign countries by taking away the nation’s money. To hide the theft, the BJP has put forward OBCs. Not a single OBC person has turned absconder after taking the country’s money but the BJP has termed Gandhi’s statement as against OBC. They should apologise to the nation,” Singh said.

    Queried on Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification as the Wayanad MP, Singh said Congress leaders are not afraid of such tactics and slammed the Union government.

    The Rajya Sabha MP alleged the BJP, RSS, and PM Modi want a “Russia, China-like democracy” in India by putting Opposition leaders in jails by filing false cases against them and disqualifying them from membership (of parliament).

    “This is the model of democracy of BJP, RSS and Modi,” he said.

    Singh questioned the chronology of events ahead of the Surat court’s verdict on Thursday and Rahul’s disqualification as Lok Sabha MP.

    “In 2019, Rahul Gandhi delivered a speech at Kolar in Karnataka, but a defamation case was filed in Surat. The moment Rahul Gandhi posed questions to Modi in parliament on February 7, the BJP team responsible for spreading falsehood became active and the case in Surat court was expedited.

    “A stay on proceedings by the high court got vacated. Though I have full regard for the judiciary; a person- a judge- is posted and the hearing gets completed on February 27 and the verdict was out on March 23, and within 24 hours Rahul’s Lok Sabha membership ended,” he claimed.

    Singh said the Opposition supported Congress as they understood the chronology of events and the Grand Old Party is grateful to them.

    “As I heard, the judge was given a double promotion as per my information,” he claimed.

    Singh questioned the source of “Rs 20,000 crore” to (businessman Gautam) Adani.

    “The company’s director was from China. From which company?….It should be probed and a joint parliamentary committee should be constituted,” the Rajya Sabha MP said.

    He said Congress workers will take to the streets against the disqualification of Rahul Gandhi.

    “Rahul Gandhi belongs to that family which has sacrificed for the country’s freedom. The entire Nehru-Gandhi family was in jail. What was the role of RSS at that time?” Singh questioned.

    Responding to a query about Rahul Gandhi’s 52 per cent attendance in Parliament, Singh claimed “Mikes are stopped in Parliament. Parts of Rahul’s speech were expunged. He is present among the people in the entire country. Tell me whether any BJP leader had walked in the country for 4,000 ks?”

    He shot back at a reporter who questioned how could ageing Congress leaders contest polls, especially when the BJP has rolled out a youth policy recently.
    “Did you know the age of the Prime Minister or Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan?” Singh asked.

    The Congress veteran, who walked in the Bharat Jodo Yatra, also challenged the concerned reporter to match steps with him if he can and advised him not to ask such questions.

    Later, Singh and other leaders of Congress staged a protest against Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification under Mahatma Gandhi’s statue in the Phoolbagh area.

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    #BJP #attacking #Rahul #Gandhi #hide #skeletons #Digvijaya #Singh

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Skeletons Roll as Investigations into Conman’s Concoctions Reach Gujarat

    Skeletons Roll as Investigations into Conman’s Concoctions Reach Gujarat

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    by Raashid Andrabi

    SRINAGAR: Kiran Patel, the Conman from Gujarat who was arrested in Srinagar for impersonating a top-ranking bureaucrat, has been making headlines since his arrest on March 3. As investigations continue, more details have emerged about his activities and associates.

    Who Is This 420?

    Kiran Patel, a man hailing from Ghodasar area of Gujarat, was recently nabbed by security officials for posing as a top-ranking bureaucrat while on his third trip to the picturesque Kashmir. The daring imposter had been impersonating an additional director in the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) and enjoying security cover, including a personal security officer and an escort vehicle.

    The charade came to a screeching halt when a complaint was lodged by the PMO, stating that no such position existed in their office. The police promptly swung into action and arrested Kiran Patel from a luxurious five-star hotel in Srinagar, where he had been living in style while enjoying his ill-gotten gains.

    Patel made two visits to Srinagar in February to explore health resorts and discuss tourism growth, holding multiple meetings. He went even further, visiting Lal Chowk in Srinagar and Uri’s Kaman Post near the Line of Control, before being detained. In Budgam, he even abused a senior civil administration officer for not getting his superior to welcome him in the district.

    ‘Just An Engineer’

    Kiran Patel’s wife, Malini Patel, has since come out in defence of her husband, claiming that he is an engineer who went to Jammu and Kashmir for development work and that he cannot do anything wrong.

    Patel’s family claims that the allegations against him are baseless and subject to trial, and that it’s a reflection of some political rivalry. His advocate, Rehan Gohar raised concerns about how Patel managed to visit vulnerable places with high-level protocols that are usually only accessible to government officials. The police recorded Patel’s statement before a magistrate and released another person who was accompanying him in Nishad.

    The police, however, have a different story. They allege that Kiran had been faking a position and using it to gain access to government officials and businesspersons, promising those favours in exchange for money. They have seized several documents and electronic devices from Kiran’s possession, which they believe will help them uncover the extent of his illegal activities.

    This incident has raised concerns over the security arrangements in the region and the ease with which people can impersonate government officials and gain access to sensitive information.

    Not an ‘Intelligence Failure’

    The Jammu and Kashmir Police have come under fire after it emerged that the conman was provided with security cover and a bulletproof vehicle during his stay in Kashmir. However, the ADGP Kashmir Vijay Kumar has claimed that this was not an intelligence failure but a “mistake” that is being investigated.

    The ADGP has made it clear that any officer who ordered the provision of security cover to the Conman will be dealt with.

    Reports suggest that the security cover was provided to Patel after a Deputy Commissioner made the request and sought the security cover. The officer has been questioned.

    Veteran PRO Official Resigns

    Hitesh Pandya, an additional public relations officer in the Gujarat Chief Minister’s Office, has resigned after serving for nearly 22 years. The resignation was due to the links between his son, Amit, a businessman associated with the BJP, and “conman” Kiran Pate. Pandya had served five chief ministers, including Narendra Modi, Anandiben Patel, and Bhupendra Patel.

    Pandya confirmed that his son had visited J&K with Kiran Patel “for business purposes” with his approval, but he denied any knowledge of Patel’s links to the CMO. He stated that Patel was affiliated with a private organization called Nation First Foundation (NFF), which Pandya had established in 2011, to promote Modi’s ideologies. Pandya had relieved Patel and all individuals associated with him from NFF in 2011, citing improper billing and business practices, reported The Indian Express.

    When asked specifically about Amit’s connection with Kiran Patel by The Indian Express, Pandya stated that they were both employed at a publicity company in 2004. Pandya came to the realization in 2011 that Patel was not someone they should associate themselves with, and therefore he relieved him and all the individuals associated with him from NFF.

    After Amit’s “rare heart condition” in September 2022, their contact increased, and Pandya admitted that he didn’t warn his son about Kiran Patel. However, Pandya mentioned that he informed the Chief Minister and other relevant authorities about the case as soon as he found out about it from Amit.

    Amit and Jay Sitapara had accompanied Patel to Srinagar and were in the room when police arrested the conman. They were permitted to go home. Later, when the pressure built up from Delhi, they were summoned to Srinagar and are being investigated by the police. It was against this backdrop that Pandya Sr submitted his papers.

    Four More Warrants

    As the Srinagar racket started troubling Gujarat, the police have booked Kiran Patel along with his wife for cheating and criminal conspiracy. The Ahmadabad city crime branch has lodged a case against Patel for trying to usurp a senior citizen’s bungalow in the city using the same tactic.

    The latest FIR alleges that Patel tried to grab a bungalow in a posh locality in Ahmedabad by winning the trust of its owner through false claims of being a “Class 1 officer in the PMO” and having close relations with politicians. Patel and his wife, Malini Patel, have been shown as co-accused in the FIR. The couple had put their own nameplate outside the bungalow and even did a house-warming ritual as if they were the owners.

    Four FIRs related to cheating have been registered against Patel in different police stations of Gujarat in the past. Since he is in judicial custody in Jammu and Kashmir, authorities will try to bring him back to Gujarat through a transfer warrant.

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    #Skeletons #Roll #Investigations #Conmans #Concoctions #Reach #Gujarat

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • A rare glimpse inside Britain’s secret vault of whale skeletons

    A rare glimpse inside Britain’s secret vault of whale skeletons

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    Behind a 10-foot tall door, in a secret location, lies a treasure trove of bones. Some of the biggest bones are laid out on storage units made of scaffolding, others are stacked against each other on racks – rows and rows of specimens. The smallest are tucked into drawers of faded-yellow metal cabinets. A selection of skulls lies on a low table; crudely stuffed animals hang from the painted breezeblock walls. Everything is carefully labelled.

    This vast room houses the Natural History Museum’s cetacean collection – a globally unique hoard of 6,000 whales, dolphins and porpoises. The artefacts are so enormous and irreplaceable, they’re housed at a secret location away from the main museum building.

    Whale skulls.
    Dolphin skeletons
    The skull of a sperm whale.
    Whale spines.

    It is the most complete collection of these creatures in the world, containing specimens of 90% of the world’s 90 cetacean species, including 24 from UK waters.

    “It’s visually stunning, yes, but also incredibly scientifically and culturally significant,” says Richard Sabin, the Natural History Museum’s principal curator of mammals. “You’re looking at one of the best research collections of its kind in the world – what makes it unique is the species representation.”

    The room’s cool temperature and low humidity have been designed to preserve its precious contents, from bones to baleen. As well as specialist biology and evolutionary history, the collection enables scientists to look at how everything from DNA to hormones vary across time and space.

    Fused vertebrae seen in the Greenwich whale, found in 2010, which shows the animal was elderly

    Crucially, collections such as this (one of only five of its kind in the world), may provide clues about how whales, dolphins and porpoises might respond to future stresses such as the climate crisis. “These institutions are like reservoirs of scientific information,” Sabin says. “[Not only can we] look back in time and see how things have changed, we can plan for the future. That’s one of the greatest uses for this collection.”

    The Natural History Museum has been officially recording whale and dolphin strandings since 1913, and many remains end up here after postmortem. In addition to 800 strandings, there are remnants from whaling expeditions and archaeological finds, some stretching as far back as 500 years.

    One of the largest occupies a big glass cabinet, which dominates the main gangway. Here, the Thames whale lies in state: the northern bottlenose whale that became something of a celebrity in 2006 when it swam upriver, stranded on the sand in front of crowds of Londoners, and despite efforts to save it, died.

    The bottlenose whale that swam up the Thames in 2006

    Another was uncovered in 2010 as builders dug new jetty foundations at Greenwich, in London. Huge bones sticking up out of the muddy Thames foreshore were identified by Sabin as a headless North Atlantic right whale. “The skeleton was at right angles to the flow of the river, with the tail facing up the slope of the beach … that’s not a natural stranding position,” he says. It had likely been pulled up by the tail, then beheaded for its precious baleen, once used to make corsetry and other garments.

    Carbon dating pinpointed the Greenwich whale’s death to between 1580 and 1660, while cut marks on the bone surfaces indicated “defleshing”. “Everyone took what they could from it before the skeleton collapsed under its own weight,” says Sabin. “This animal is now the largest, oldest dated specimen of this species anywhere in the world – this skeleton can tell us a lot.” For example, its DNA could reveal whether limited genetic diversity, climate or competition contributed to right whales’ vulnerability before commercial whaling.

    Elsewhere, dozens of jaw bones are stacked up. One lower jaw of a male sperm whale is abnormally twisted into a corkscrew shape: this unusual specimen came from an Antarctic whaling ship in 1959. At first glance, the jaw seems to make feeding an impossibility. But the back teeth, worn down to “stumpy pegs”, indicate that this whale was successfully eating giant squid, thanks to its highly specialised echolocation and efficient suction feeding.

    Deformed/contorted sperm whale jaw.

    Sabin, still fascinated by each revelation after 30 years as curator, is particularly proud of the insight garnered from crates containing 800 baleen plates from a blue whale stranded in 1891. Nicknamed Hope, the young female died on a sandbank near Wexford, Ireland. Now, her 25m-long skeleton is on display in the museum’s Hintze Hall.

    By analysing her baleen – layers of keratin that are used to trap krill – scientists at Southampton University learned, using a technique known as stable isotope analysis, that in summer she fed near Norway, Iceland and Greenland to accumulate her fatty blubber layer, then in winter migrated south to the Azores and west Africa for the breeding season.

    Hope the blue whale’s baleen plate
    Hope the blue whale’s baleen plate

    What’s more, visible ridges on this hard, black baleen represent the annual peaks and troughs of her feeding cycle, and scientists found that about 18 months before she died she remained in the south for 10 months – probably to have a calf. In the Wexford archives, Sabin found that violent storms were recorded in the days before she beached, storms that could have steered her off course.

    In addition, researchers at Baylor University in Texas analysed her earwax and found her pregnancy hormone progesterone levels were elevated during the last 18 months of her life for 10 months – the blue whale gestation period. “Suddenly we have this rich information about the life of an individual whale that was living in 1890,” Sabin says.

    Whale earwax plugs

    With Sabin’s help, the same Texas team studied persistent chemical pollutants and the stress hormone cortisol in plugs of whale earwax to reveal how, between 1870 and 2016, human activities from commercial whaling, war, industrial pollution and shipping noise, have caused physical stress responses in whales.

    “This information is written into the tissues of these animals,” Sabin says. “Suddenly, in the past 20 years, we’ve developed technologies that mean we can liberate information from this kind of material. We can take single hairs and do genome DNA testing or stable isotope analysis, which gives info about diet, distribution, movement, indicators.”

    Richard Sabin

    The museum is entering an era of digitisation, uploading 3D surface scans or CT scans of specimens to a free online database. It allows researchers anywhere in the world to collaborate. “This collection gives these specimens a life after death,” says Sabin. “What are we going to learn in the future?”

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    #rare #glimpse #Britains #secret #vault #whale #skeletons
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )