VHP district secretary Muthuvel has been arrested on Wednesday in an extortion case
Ariyalur’s district secretary of Vishwa Hindu Parishad Muthuvel has been arrested on Wednesday by the police for blackmailing a priest with Rs 25 lakhs.
According to reports, Muthuvel demanded Rs 25 lakhs from the priest Dominic Savio of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Ariyalur, Thanjavur district, failing which he would release videos to tarnish the latter’s image.
Muthuvel has been deeply engaged in Lavanya’s suicide case. The 17-year-old student from Sacred Hearts Higher Secondary School, Ariyalur, consumed poison on January 9 and died ten days later.
Before passing away, Muthuvel visited Lavanya in the hospital and recorded two videos of her. She said she took the extreme step as she was being forced to convert to Christianity. Allegations of torture after her refusal to convert were also raised by the girl.
The case created a political furore in DMK-ruled Tamil Nadu with the VHP and BJP leaders condemning the incident and blaming the state government for not putting a pin on the “blatant religious conversion” in the state.
On a plea filed by the girl’s father, the Madurai bench of the Madras High Court on January 21 passed an order to transfer the case to the CBI. The case is currently under investigation. However, on February 3, the state government filed an appeal in the Supreme Court challenging the order.
Patna: Bihar-based political strategist Prashant Kishor (PK) on Monday thanked Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin for arresting Tamil leader Senthamijhan Shiman, who allegedly gave a provocative speech against Bihari labourers in the state.
PK had tweeted Shiman’s video and demanded that the Tamil Nadu government act against him.
After the arrest, Kishor said “Thankyou Sir” to Stalin.
The Bihar and Tamil Nadu Police on March 10 claimed that all videos, purportedly showing assault on migrant labourers in Tamil Nadu, uploaded on social media are fake. Bihar Police registered two FIRs in this matter while 13 FIRs registered in Tamil Nadu for uploading fake videos.
Following the claims of the police of the two states, Kishor, on March 11, challenged them to register FIR against him as he had uploaded two videos related to a Tamil Nadu incident where local people are beating Bihari labourers.
He said that while some people had uploaded fake videos to provoke Tamil youths to beat Bihari labourers but that does not mean violent incidents are not taking place against Hindi speaking people in Tamil Nadu. “I have uploaded two videos where Hindi speaking people were beaten by local Tamil youths. One such incident had happened in the train in Kongu district and Tamil Nadu police registered an FIR against it. In another video, a leader was addressing a gathering and giving an ultimatum to Bihari people to leave Tamil Nadu in 7 days. I challenge Bihar and Tamilnadu police to declare my two videos fake and register an FIR against me,” he said on March 11 during the 161th day of his padyatra in Maharajganj of Siwan district.
Kapurthala: A man has been arrested here on Saturday for allegedly threatening to kill senior Congress leader and Bholath MLA Sukhpal Singh Khaira, police said.
Khaira, in his complaint, said that he received a threat on one of his social media accounts that he will be shot for his various outbursts, Senior Superintendent of Police Rajpal Singh said in a statement.
With the help of an IT team of the police the accused, identified as Raja, was traced and arrested.
The account used by the accused to give the threat was being run on a fake identity, police said.
According to police, the accused has confessed to the crime.
A case under section 506 (criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code and sections of the Information Technology Act has been registered against the accused, they said.
London: Britain’s first female Sikh MP Preet Kaur Gill has said she was forced to contact police after receiving a threatening email message saying: “watch your back”.
The senior Labour MP for Birmingham, Edgbaston said that following the email, she is forced to keep a bodyguard at her constituency surgery meetings.
“It was very direct. It’s a worry because I’m with my daughters in the constituency all the time. My family live there. It really puts into context the kind of job that you do. It’s tough enough as it is, but then when you’re faced with that, there’s very little support. This latest direct threat has really worried and concerned me,” Gill told GB News on Saturday.
“As a woman, when you put yourself forward and you want to address injustices and you care about issues that affect your constituents, you’re then faced with people that think it’s okay to say this sort of stuff to you.”
Instead of using an alias, the threat was sent from a legitimate account with a genuine email address, which left Gill shocked.
“I could not believe that this person used their place of work email to actually make that threat,” Gill, who had been a target of hate campaigns in the past, said.
Gill has reported the incident to the West Midlands Police.
“Once you’ve raised it with the police, they’ve got to go away and do an investigation, but there’s no real understanding of the impact it has on you, your everyday work, the psychological impact, the kind of always looking behind your shoulder,” she told GB News.
Gill was recently accused of undermining victims of sexual abuse, according to a Guardian report.
The Shadow Secretary of State for International Development, had sent a series of WhatsApp messages on a group undermining allegations of sexual abuse within gurdwaras.
Finland’s Eurovision representative Käärijä is third on the betting lists.
Finland Eurovisa representative Wrapper has hurtled to the top of the betting charts. Odds of betting sites combined Eurovision world– website, Finland is third on the list of favorites to win, right after Sweden and Ukraine.
After Saturday’s UMK final, the reading describing the probability of Finland’s victory rose from six to 12 percent. At the top is Sweden, whose Eurovision representative is predicted to be someone who has already won the competition once Lorena. The singer got through with his song Tattoo For the final of Melodifestivalen, which takes place on March 11.
Supplier Tobbe Ek published by a Swedish newspaper on Sunday A detailed analysis on Aftonbladet’s blog Wrapper about the victory with the title: “Finland challenges Loreen – in Cha Cha cha.”
According to the reporter, Finns have previously lacked the confidence to vote for a big hit song in Finnish. Instead, Finns have sent songs in English to the competition.
“That changed yesterday, and Cha Cha Cha it’s exactly the kind of craziness that usually works well in Eurovision.”
According to the editor, the Finnish language suits the song musically well and works to its advantage.
Ukraine apart from the betting lists, the Nordic countries are currently dominating. After Finland, Norway is represented on the list Alessandra with a song Queen of Kings.
Finland’s Eurovision representative UMK’s performance has aroused enthusiasm among viusu fans. For example, there are several fan-made reaction videos to Saturday’s show on YouTube.
Correction 27.2. 4:28 p.m.: Jere Pöyhönen’s name was originally written as Jere Pöyhänen in the main picture.
Maharashtra Deputy CM Devendra Fadnavis. (File Photo)
Mumbai: Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said on Tuesday that he had been informed by former governor B S Koshyari that MVA leaders had written a letter with a threatening tone to the ex-governor over MLC nominations and refused to withdraw it.
The deputy CM’s remarks come a day after Koshyari defended his stand to sit on the nominations for 12 Members of the Legislative Council under the governor’s quota when Uddhav Thackeray led the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) government in the state.
Koshyari had said that MVA leaders had tried to browbeat him over the MLC nominations.
Speaking to reporters in Pune, Fadnavis said, “As per my information, MahaVikas Aghadi leaders had visited Raj Bhavan and met (then) governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari. The governor told me that MVA leaders had written a letter in a threatening tone. He had even asked them to re-submit a fresh letter but due to their ego, they refused to do it.”
The MLC nominations were a major flashpoint between the then MVA government and Koshyari, who recently resigned as the Maharashtra governor.
Leaders from MVA, which comprises the Thackeray group, the Nationalist Congress Party and the Congress, had also accused Koshyari of acting at the behest of the Bharatiya Janata Party, which was in the opposition then.
New Delhi: The Aam Aadmi Party on Tuesday accused the Bharatiya Janata Party-led Central government of threatening the fourth pillar of democracy by raiding the BBC.
Lashing out at the government over its actions, AAP leader Atishi said: “The BJP wants to suppress every word spoken or shown against the government. The Income Tax Raid on the BBC is an attack on the democracy of India. Media is the most important pillar of democracy, today the BJP Central government is trying to break the fourth pillar of democracy.”
Addressing the media, she said that this is a message to the entire media fraternity that if they show anything against the BJP and the PM, they will meet the same fate. Raising questions about the Centre’s intentions behind the action, she said: “BJP banned the documentary made by BBC to prevent the country from seeing these allegations unfold. India is at number 150 out of 180 countries in the Global Index of Press Freedom, today the whole world is questioning India’s democratic status.”
“Why has the BBC been raided? Because today, not only India but the entire world is discussing the BBC documentary. First of all, the Bharatiya Janata Party-ruled Central government got that documentary banned and removed from websites and social media so that no one in India is able to watch it. This was the first act of censorship by the BJP-ruled central government after the BBC’s documentary on Narendra Modi.”
And with today’s income tax raid, she alleged, that the BJP-led central government “is threatening all of us and asserting that no one, not even a globally famous organisation like the BBC can say, write, or show anything that is critical of their administration”.
Atishi asked the BJP to explain what image of India does it want to present to the whole world.
“History is witness that you can suppress the voice of the people for some time but you cannot suppress the voice of every person forever,” she said, appealing to the BJP to not intimidate the media like this, and stop tarnishing India’s image in front of the world.
New Delhi: A retired IAS officer has alleged that he received death threats from a dismissed warder of Delhi Prisons who also demanded Rs 10 crore from him, police said on Wednesday.
The victim filed a police complaint on Sunday alleging that Yogesh Kumar Meena and his accomplice Sachin were threatening him and demanding Rs 10 crore within seven days.
He claimed the torture has been going on since he joined the Delhi Cooperative Tribunal.
The ex-bureaucrat said he had filed several complaints against Meena at the Tughlak Road police station. He said he had also complained to the Director General of Delhi Prisons following which Meena was terminated from service on February 2.
Police said both the parties knew each other through community gatherings.
“A case under IPC sections 387 (putting person in fear of death or of grievous hurt, in order to commit extortion), 506 (punishment for criminal intimidation) and 120B (punishment of criminal conspiracy) was registered against the accused,” a police officer said.
New Delhi: A retired IAS officer has alleged that he received death threats from a dismissed warder of Delhi Prisons who also demanded Rs 10 crore from him, police said on Wednesday.
The victim filed a police complaint on Sunday alleging that Yogesh Kumar Meena and his accomplice Sachin were threatening him and demanding Rs 10 crore within seven days.
He claimed the torture has been going on since he joined the Delhi Cooperative Tribunal.
The ex-bureaucrat said he had filed several complaints against Meena at the Tughlak Road police station. He said he had also complained to the Director General of Delhi Prisons following which Meena was terminated from service on February 2.
Police said both the parties knew each other through community gatherings.
“A case under IPC sections 387 (putting person in fear of death or of grievous hurt, in order to commit extortion), 506 (punishment for criminal intimidation) and 120B (punishment of criminal conspiracy) was registered against the accused,” a police officer said.
“Countries need to invest in vaccines, education campaigns and effective treatments for people who show up sick,” said David Harvey, the executive director of the National Coalition of STD Directors. “Neighboring countries to the U.S. not investing in a broad-based approach to the problem will ultimately affect the U.S.,” he said.
For now, the situation here looks good. On the verge of spiraling out of control last summer, when cases exceeded 450 a day, mpox is now all but gone, with the CDC reporting an average of two new cases a day, as of Feb. 1.
But across the globe, cases started to rise again at the end of last month, according to the World Health Organization, which will decide on Thursday if the outbreak still constitutes an international emergency. The number of cases reported worldwide was slightly over 400, with most of the new ones in the Americas and Africa.
Of the 13 countries that saw an increase, Mexico reported the highest weekly hike, reaching 72 cases.
The United States’ southern neighbor is now among the 10 countries in the world with the highest overall number of cases during the current outbreak. But unlike the other nine — which include the United States, Spain, and France — Mexico has not acquired any vaccines against mpox, nor seems to be planning to.
Top Mexican health officials have claimed the shot has not yet been proven safe and effective.
Jorge Alcocer Varela, Mexico’s health secretary, told the country’s Senate in November that the vaccine also didn’t prevent people from developing symptoms. He wasn’t encouraging its use, he said, because the number of people dying from the disease was low, according to Mexican media reports.
Choosing not to vaccinate
The strain of mpox that swept the world last year isn’t particularly deadly. The WHO knows of at least 90 deaths in the current outbreak. But the ailment can cause a painful rash. It’s endemic in parts of Africa, but had never before spread so widely in the U.S. as it did last year.
Preliminary data the CDC published in September on the efficacy of Jynneos, the vaccine the U.S. and many other countries used to fight the outbreak, contradicts Mexico’s health secretary. People who had a dose of the vaccine were 14 times less likely to get infected than those who were unvaccinated, the CDC said.
Updated data since showed two doses of the vaccine given 4 weeks apart is nearly 70 percent effective in preventing people from developing mpox that needs to be treated by a doctor.
U.S. health officials attribute the decline in cases here to the efforts of public health officials last summer to get the vaccine to the people who were most likely to catch the disease: gay and bisexual men who regularly had sex with multiple partners.
The U.S. teamed with state officials and community groups, and made the shot available at large events for the LGBTQ community. Fewer than 700,000 people have received the full, two-dose regimen, but public health officials believe that the highest-risk people mostly did, and that, combined with education about the need to change sexual behavior, has helped eradicate the disease.
The Mexican health secretary didn’t respond to an emailed request for an interview.
Representatives of the Mexican LGBTQ community took to the streets last summer to demand vaccines. Those who could afford to travel and get a visa went abroad to get vaccinated.
“In Mexico the government was never actually interested in buying the vaccines,” said Ricardo Baruch, a public health activist working on LGBTQ issues. It also didn’t want to buy antivirals, another way to show “they didn’t really care about the outbreak,” he said.
Civil society organizations stepped in to communicate the risk of infection to gay men, Baruch said. He believes that led members of the community to take additional precautions.
That’s unsustainable in the long run, however.
And the pride festival season, which contributed to the spread of the virus globally last year, is about to start, with WorldPride kicking off in Sydney, Australia, next week.
Yet Mexico is hardly the only country in the Americas relying only on behavior modification.
Most countries in the region have tried to stem the outbreak without vaccines, said Rubén Mayorga Sagastume, the mpox incident manager at the Pan-American Health Organization.
Only a dozen countries bought shots through a PAHO joint purchase mechanism: Bahamas, Belize, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guyana, Honduras, Jamaica, Panama, Peru and Trinidad and Tobago. Colombia in December made a deal with Japan to get 25,000 doses of a Japanese-made vaccine initially developed for smallpox to immunize people as part of a clinical trial.
Several countries that didn’t get vaccines said they couldn’t agree to waive liability for the vaccine manufacturer, the Danish firm Bavarian Nordic, as pharma companies typically demand during outbreaks, Mayorga Sagastume said. “Others, I imagine that was because of financial constraints, because vaccines were expensive,” he said.
Bavarian Nordic spokesman Rolf Sass Sørensen said the company doesn’t comment on price, but that it does offer differentiated prices to countries. “The vaccine has been sold and distributed to all countries expressing an interest in receiving it,” he said.
Barely any shots for Africa
The success of the vaccination campaign in the U.S. also isn’t helping Africa, where mpox has long been endemic, where the current outbreak originated, and where the next one could emerge.
The African Union, which represents all the 55 countries on the continent, has not requested shots, Sørensen said.
That’s despite the virus being deadlier there.
One in three people confirmed to have mpox in Africa since the beginning of the year has died, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.
That’s likely due to the deadlier virus clade circulating in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which is different from the milder clade that infected people globally. Jynneos is effective against both clades, Bavarian Nordic said. And the number of mpox cases in Africa is most likely an undercount, as many countries still lack the capacity to test for the virus.
Testing is a bigger challenge in the DRC right now than access to vaccines, said Anne Rimoin, a UCLA epidemiologist who studies mpox.
The outbreak in African countries has been different in terms of people affected and needs compared to the rest of the world, she said. There, the virus mostly infects heterosexual people, usually in remote areas. But countries like the DRC don’t have the capacity or equipment to test people and keep a close eye on the real number of cases.
That also makes it harder to rapidly assess who needs to get vaccinated.
A World Health Organization-backed working group is now studying how human-to-human transmission works in endemic countries and how the virus spills over from animals, said Rosamund Lewis, the WHO’s technical lead for mpox.
Scientists need to define the target population, the type of vaccine to use, the frequency of immunization and the age of people to be vaccinated before any vaccination program starts, Lewis said.
The WHO has also been facilitating talks among countries with vaccine stockpiles and African countries that want them, said Patrick Otim, who handles health emergencies at WHO Africa. Late last year, South Korea committed to donate at least 50,000 doses to be used for health workers and people living in most affected areas.
But for Rimoin, who has seen attention and funding come and go with other international disease outbreaks, “the big question is what kind of sustained investment is going to be made to be able to be in front of these epidemics, as opposed to constantly chasing behind them.”
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )