Tag: View

  • Sultan Al Neyadi shares ‘awe-inspiring’ view of Dubai from space

    Sultan Al Neyadi shares ‘awe-inspiring’ view of Dubai from space

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    United Arab Emirates (UAE) astronaut Sultan Al Neyadi, who is currently on a six-month space mission to the International Space Station (ISS) shared a breathtaking night view of the emirate from the space.

    The image, which he shared on Twitter shows Dubai’s signature Palm Jumeirah, Jebel Ali and residential areas in Dubai, including the distinctive Jumeirah Village Circle.

    “Dubai shines almost as bright as the stars up here,” Sultan Al Neyadi tweeted.

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    In turn, Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai, shared the photo on his Twitter account.

    “An awe-inspiring photograph of Dubai taken by Emirati astronaut Sultan Al Neyadi from the space station paints a picture of the nation’s extraordinary achievements both on Earth and beyond,” Sheikh Hamdan tweeted.

    On April 28, Al Neyadi – made history by becoming the first Arab to perform a six-and-a-half-hour spacewalk with his American colleague Stephen Bowen.

    Al Neyadi trained for over 55 hours at NASA’s Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory (NBL) at Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas in preparation for the spacewalks.

    Sultan Al Neyadi made history on March 2 by becoming the first Arab to join a long-term space mission that will last six months as part of SpaceX’s crew.

    The mission is a historic landmark for the UAE.

    The SpaceX Dragon spacecraft, named Endeavor, aboard a Falcon 9 rocket, carried the Emirati astronaut along with two NASA astronauts, Mission Commander Stephen Bowen, Pilot Warren Hoburg, and Roscosmos Cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • IWPC urges government to take empathetic view on wrestlers’ demands

    IWPC urges government to take empathetic view on wrestlers’ demands

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    New Delhi: The Indian Women’s Press Corps on Saturday urged the government to take an empathetic view of the issues raised by the protesting women wrestlers demanding a probe against Wrestling Federation of India chief Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh over allegations of sexual harassment.

    In a statement, the IWPC said it stands in solidarity with the women wrestlers. It also deplored any form of harassment and sexual exploitation of women sportspersons.

    “These women wrestlers have made our country proud and have been sitting on protest for several days now. As women sports professionals, they need to be supported and encouraged,” it said.

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    “We urge the government to take complete and empathetic cognisance of their issues in the interests of a speedy, impartial and fair investigation,” it added.

    The country’s top wrestlers, including Vinesh Phogat, Sakshi Malik and Bajrang Punia, launched a second round of protest against Singh, who is also a BJP MP, at Jantar Mantar on Sunday over allegations of sexual harassment and intimidation.

    As the chorus of support for the protesting wrestlers grew, Delhi Police on Friday filed two FIRs against Singh on allegations of sexual harassment levelled by seven women wrestlers.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Some label necessary’: SC seeks Centre’s view on social benefits to same-sex couples

    ‘Some label necessary’: SC seeks Centre’s view on social benefits to same-sex couples

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    New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Thursday asked the Centre to find a way to give same-sex couples basic social benefits, like joint bank accounts or nominating a partner in insurance policies, even without legal recognition of their marital status, as it appeared that the court could be agreeing that granting legal recognition to same-sex marriages falls within the domain of legislature.

    A bench headed by Chief Justice of India and comprising Justices S.K. Kaul, S. Ravindra Bhat, Hima Kohli, and P.S. Narasimha said: “Look at the profound nature of our culture, what happened that in 1857 and thereafter, you got the Indian Penal Code, we imposed as it as a code of Victorian morality… our culture was extraordinarily inclusive, very broad and it is possible one of the reasons why our religion survived even after foreign invasions because of inclusion, the profound nature of our culture.”

    The bench told Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, representing the Centre: “We understand our limitation as a court, no question about it. There are so many issues, of course you have made your argument on the legislative side, so many issues on the administrative side… we not have a model, it will not be appropriate to devise a model but we can certainly tell the government that look, how law has gone so far now…”

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    Mehta said that class specific problems can be addressed.

    The Chief Justice said, “We take your point, look if the court were to go in the legislative arena, you have made a very powerful argument on that, look you will be legislating. This is not your remit, this is for Parliament or state legislatures… but short of that, our law has gone so far now.”

    “Now what the government can do to ensure that these relationships based on cohabitation or associations, they must be recognised in terms creating conditions of security, social welfare, and while doing that, we also ensure for future that these relationships should ceased to be ostracised in the society.”

    Mehta contended that while same-sex persons have the fundamental right to cohabit, choose a partner etc, the same cannot be given the label of marriage.

    The Chief Justice said: “Once you recognize the right to cohabit, homosexual relationships are not really one off incidents in the life of persons, they may also be symptomatic of a sustained emotional, social, and physical relationship. Once you recognise that right to cohabit is a fundamental right, then to say to you cannot seek any legal recognition at all… because once we accept the fact that same sex couples have a right to cohabit then there is a corresponding duty on the state to at least recognise that cohabitation must find recognition in the law… we are not going into marriage at all.”

    “Cohabitating couples… can they not have a joint bank account, a nomination in the insurance policy.”

    Mehta said these are all human concerns, “which I also share and also the government shares, and we must find a solution from that point of view”.

    The bench said: “You may or may not call marriage, but some label is necessary.”

    The Chief Justice said, “We want some element of broad sense of coalition, we are also conscious of the fact that so much which representative democracy must achieve in our the country… one of the couple of same sex relationship can adopt no bar at all. In such a situation, if a child goes to school, does the government want a situation where the child is treated as a single parent child… you do not have to go as far as marriage in this as well. Can the child not have the benefit of cohabitation between the two people in whose home the child resides.”

    “There is a concern, then both have to be recognised.”

    Mehta submitted that there is a more of a sociological problem, rearing of the child, development of the child, these are hypothetical situations.

    The bench observed that long cohabitation raises the presumption of marriage, because in old times where were the marriage certificates or registration.

    It said that when court says recognition it need not be recognition as marriage, it may mean recognition which entitles them to certain benefits, and the association of two people need not be equated to marriage and “not marriage but some label is needed”.

    The top court asked Centre to come back on May 3, with its response on social benefits that same sex couples could be granted even without legal recognition of their marital status.

    The top court is hearing a batch of pleas seeking legal sanction for same-sex marriages. The Centre has told the Supreme Court that demand for same-sex marriage is a “mere urban elitist views for the purpose of social acceptance”, and recognising the right of same sex marriage would mean a virtual judicial rewriting of an entire branch of law.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Disappointed..’ LGBTQ, law students condemn BCI’s view on same-sex marriage

    ‘Disappointed..’ LGBTQ, law students condemn BCI’s view on same-sex marriage

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    New Delhi: More than 30 LGBTQIA+ collectives of law school students have said the Bar Council of India (BCI) resolution urging the Supreme Court not to deal with pleas seeking legalisation of same-sex marriage is “antithetical” to the Constitution.

    The apex bar body, on April 23, had expressed its concern on the same-sex marriage issue being heard in the Supreme Court, saying it would be “catastrophic” to overhaul something as fundamental as the concept of marriage and the matter should be left to the legislature.

    The resolution, which was issued by the BCI after a joint meeting attended by representatives of all state bar councils, said any decision by the apex court in such a sensitive matter may prove very harmful to the future generation of the country.

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    Condemning the stand, the LGBTQIA+ collectives of over 600 law school students said, “The (BCI) resolution is ignorant, harmful, and antithetical to our Constitution and the spirit of inclusive social life. As future members of the Bar, it has been alienating and hurtful to see our seniors engage in such hateful rhetoric.”

    “It attempts to tell queer persons that the law and the legal profession have no place for them. We, the undersigned, are queer and allied student groups across Indian law schools,” they said in a statement.

    The statement said that the very objective of making the Constitution was to save the minorities from the ‘rules and regulations’ drawn by the upper-class casteist and patriarchal society.

    “Constitutional morality dictates that marriage equality must not be made subject to the wishes of a casteist, cis-heteronormative, and patriarchal society. It is to save people from the worst scourges of public opinion that we have a Constitution in the first place,” the statement read.

    It also condemned the BCI’s affirmation that 99.9% of Indians oppose same-sex marriage.

    “Having cited no real authority, the BCI blatantly concocts statistics of ‘99.9%’ of Indians opposing same-sex marriage,’ to run the worn-out theory that queer persons constitute a ‘minuscule minority’. The usage of hateful rhetoric is consistent throughout the Resolution; the BCI feels no shame in calling demands for marriage equality ‘morally compunctive’ and ‘a social experiment’. We condemn this hateful speech in the strongest possible terms,” the statement read.

    The BCI must re-familiarise itself with the role envisioned during its establishment, look at the state of the Indian legal profession, and devote its resources to more pressing challenges rather than needlessly entering constitutional debates, the statement said.

    “We are most troubled by the BCI’s stunning disregard for constitutional morality. Our Constitution is a counterweight to majoritarianism, religious morality, and unjust public opinion..,” it said.

    The students belong to 36 law schools, including NMIMS Hyderabad, National Law University Delhi, Faculty of Law, Delhi University and Gujarat National Law University.

    A five-judge Constitution bench comprising Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud and Justices S K Kaul, S R Bhat, Hima Kohli and P S Narasimha is continuing with its hearing arguments on the pleas seeking validation of same-sex marriage for the sixth day on Thursday.

    (With PTI inputs)

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The Guardian view on hopes for Yemen: a long road to peace | Editorial

    The Guardian view on hopes for Yemen: a long road to peace | Editorial

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    Hope has been hard to find in Yemen. After more than eight years of war, at the cost of hundreds of thousands of lives, many of them civilians, the situation is desperate. More than two-thirds of the population are dependent on humanitarian aid. Yet, since the agreement of a truce between the Saudi-led military coalition and Iran-backed Houthi rebels last April, the country has seen a year of relative calm. This month, there was a huge cross-border exchange of prisoners of war. In the background is the thaw between Iran and Saudi Arabia, which have used Yemen as the battleground for their rivalry.

    Riyadh spearheaded the coalition supporting the internationally recognised government led by Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, which had been ousted by the Houthis. It soon discovered that there would be no speedy victory, that the conflict was draining billions from its coffers and that Houthi attacks on its oil infrastructure were increasing the expense. The Houthis also had reason to talk, having suffered heavy losses and struggling with fuel shortages.

    The UN says that this is the best opportunity in years to end the war. It has also warned that the risk of the situation deteriorating again is very real. The reestablishment of Iran-Saudi relations is still in its early stages. More critically, while much of Yemen’s devastation resulted from foreign powers pushing their own agendas in an impoverished and fragile country, this was never just a proxy war. It is a complex and fractured dispute that has become more so with time.

    If Saudi-Houthi talks make progress, Riyadh says the next step will be talks between the Houthis and the Presidential Leadership Council (PLC), to which President Hadi ceded his powers. The fragmented, unwieldy body includes officials from internationally recognised bodies and the leaders of armed groups. They are united by their opposition to the Houthis and are alarmed at being cut out of current negotiations. Bringing the peace process under UN auspices would help to build confidence. But the Houthis are emboldened, and their opponents have wildly different and contradictory agendas, including seeking a separate state in the south. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have backed different PLC members, reflecting varying interests. Forging a consensus will be immeasurably difficult. The proliferation of militias and entrenchment of a war economy are among the challenges making peace look more distant than it did eight years ago.

    Even if these parties can agree a deal, those who have suffered most – civilians – will be missing from the table. They deserve representation. Responsibility for their ordeal also extends far beyond the fighters on the ground. The US and UK have sold billions of pounds worth of weaponry to Riyadh since the conflict began. All parties have been responsible for human rights abuses, attacks on civilian targets and the blocking of humanitarian aid, but there has been no hint of accountability for the lives lost. The international community should press the case for effective and impartial investigations, and a transitional justice process. It should also find the money required to provide essential aid and services and fund the urgently needed operation to avert a catastrophic oil spill off the coast.

    There can be no peace without talking to all those waging this war. But nor can Yemen recover if control of its future is ceded solely to those who have done so much to destroy it.

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    #Guardian #view #hopes #Yemen #long #road #peace #Editorial
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Watch: UAE astronaut shares view of Makkah, Madinah from space on Shab-e-Qadr

    Watch: UAE astronaut shares view of Makkah, Madinah from space on Shab-e-Qadr

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    Abu Dhabi: United Arab Emirates (UAE) astronaut Sultan Al Neyadi, who is currently on a six-month space mission to the International Space Station (ISS) shared an incredible view of Saudi Arabia’s Makkah and Madinah.

    Al Neyadi tweeted a video of the Kingdom’s holy sites on the 27th night of Ramzan, calling the footage “a gift for Salman’s children on these blessed nights”.

    “A dedication to the country of the Two Holy Mosques, the landing site of revelation and the land of the message, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” he added.

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    The video shows Makkah and Madinah completely lit up, and stunning images of the Grand Mosque.

    Al Neyadi pans the camera over Madinah and says, “This is Madinah, the city to which Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) immigrated with his beloved people.”

    Then he moves the camera to show Jeddah.

    “This is the city of Jeddah, often referred to as the Bride of the Red Sea,” Al Neyadi says.

    Then move the camera to show Makkah and says, “The holy city of Makkah, where the message of Islam was rooted with the Prophet, may God bless him and grant him peace.”

    Al Neyadi then points to the light from the Grand Mosque in the city centre, which can be seen shining brightly in the video, even from space.

    Watch the video below

    Al Neyadi’s special gift came as crowds of worshippers performed the Isha and Taraweeh prayers on Monday at the Grand Mosque to glorify the 27th night of Ramzan, while also celebrating the last ten days of Ramzan, which many Muslims consider the most blessed.

    Emirati astronaut Sultan Al Neyadi made history on March 2 by becoming the first Arab to join a long-term space mission that will last six months as part of SpaceX’s crew.

    The mission is a historic landmark for the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

    The SpaceX Dragon spacecraft, named Endeavor, aboard a Falcon 9 rocket, carried the Emirati astronaut along with two NASA astronauts, Mission Commander Stephen Bowen, Pilot Warren Hoburg, and Roscosmos Cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev.

    Sultan Al Neyadi will be the first Arab to walk in space when he exits the International Space Station on April 28.



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    #Watch #UAE #astronaut #shares #view #Makkah #Madinah #space #ShabeQadr

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • WhatsApp Rolls Out New interface For Screen Lock View: All You Need To Know – Kashmir News

    WhatsApp Rolls Out New interface For Screen Lock View: All You Need To Know – Kashmir News

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    WhatsApp, one of the most popular instant messaging applications around the world, is always looking for new ways to improve its user interface and enhance user experience. Now, according to a new report, the Meta-owned platform is releasing a new interface for the screen lock view.

    Common questionsAnswers
    Name of the feature?Screen lock – new interface
    Status?Rolling out
    Compatibility?WhatsApp beta for iOS 23.8.0.71 is marked as a compatible update.
    I have the same version but I don’t have this feature, why?This feature is available to some beta testers, and it is rolling out to more people over the coming days.
    Previous news?WhatsApp beta for iOS enhances the media picker feature by introducing a new bottom toolbar!

    SCREEN LOCK

    WhatsApp is always looking for new ways to improve its user interface and enhance user experience. Recently, WhatsApp released a redesigned sidebar for the native macOS app, and an improved media picker with a bottom toolbar, and it seems that the company is not done yet. In fact, thanks to the latest WhatsApp beta for iOS 23.8.0.71 update available on the TestFlight app, we discovered that WhatsApp is introducing a tweaked screen lock view:

    WA NEW SCREEN LOCK INTERFACE WITH TAG IOSjpg

    According to the report, the new screen lock view is definitely more intuitive and modern, as the label is now a button and the lock icon has been moved to the top of the screen. In addition, you can expect a screen lock option on the native macOS app soon due to this redesign.

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    It is important to note that some users may experience some issues with the new redesign as the screen lock view may unexpectedly appear even when it shouldn’t. This will surely be fixed in the next updates, WABetaInfo said.

    The Meta-owned instant app is also working on bringing a new style to the app settings, where every section of the app settings appears with rounded corners and small margins around the edges. This confirms their commitment to improving the design of the app.

    The redesigned screen lock view is available for some beta testers that install the latest version of WhatsApp beta for iOS from the TestFlight app, and it is rolling out to even more people over the coming days.

    In related news, WhatsApp has announced new security features to provide users with additional privacy and security. The new features include Account Protect, Device Verification, and Automatic Security Codes, which help users prevent unauthorized access to accounts and protect against mobile device malware.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Hyderabad: Underwater aqua expo in Kukatpally offers 180-degree marine view

    Hyderabad: Underwater aqua expo in Kukatpally offers 180-degree marine view

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    Hyderabad: Offering a 180-degree view of marine life, an underwater tunnel aqua exhibition has been set up to enthral its visitors in Kukatpally from Saturday.

    The expo will be open for another 60 days with an entry fee set at Rs 100 per head.

    Over 3000 varieties of fish from 500 different species of both freshwater and saltwater, sourced from Malaysia, Singapore, and Kerala are up on display.

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    Starfish, angelfish, clownfish, sea horses, wrasses, eels, boxfish, and other rare species are to name a few present at the exhibition.

    Arapaima is a unique variety of fish that weighs 60 kg and eats one and a half kilos of chicken every day, valued at Rs 6 lakh is also on display to watch.

    Organisers of the expo reportedly stated that the tunnels and aquariums took six months to set up with the maintenance of minimum temperatures for the easy survival of the fish.

    Apart from aquariums, the expo also includes a handloom exhibition showcasing handicrafts from local artisans and amusement rides.

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    #Hyderabad #Underwater #aqua #expo #Kukatpally #offers #180degree #marine #view

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Police Issues Traffic Advisory In View Of Shab-I-Qadar, Jumat-Ul- Vida And Eid Prayers – Kashmir News

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    The Jammu And Kashmir Traffic Police Issues Traffic Advisory In View Of Shab-I-Qadar, Jumat-Ul- Vida and Eid Prayers at Hazratbal.

    Following Traffic Diversions Shall be In PlacetraWhatsApp Image 2023 04 16 at 21.41.54

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  • India’s Tipping Point – The view from inside 7 Racecourse Road

    India’s Tipping Point – The view from inside 7 Racecourse Road

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    Can anyone pinpoint the precise date on which India embarked on its economic reforms that enabled the country to transform from a USD 266 billion economy to a nearly USD 3 trillion engine of growth? A new book -India’s Tipping Point by a spokesperson of former prime minister Narasimha Rao fixes this date as July 24, 1991. Because, on the evening of this date the one-month-old government headed by Rao, regarded as a ‘weak’ prime minister unexpectedly abolished the Industries Development and Regulation Act 1951. This Law was the mother of all laws and regulations that gave the power to government to control all economic activities. “The abolition of this Act in more ways than one represented a change in the political, official, and national mindset. While August 15, 1947, placed India on the global political map, July 24, 1991, out it on the international economic map. The innate Indian entrepreneurship and spirit of innovation, were unshackled, significantly contributing to the rewriting of India’s destiny”, writes the author of this book S. Narendra. The book coincides with Narasimha Rao’s centennial anniversary.

    Were the 1991 Indian economic reforms undertaken under the pressure of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that extended to the government to avert a financial crisis? The answer is an emphatic ‘No’. The IMF did not even hint that the government should abolish IDRA and dismantle both the foundation and the superstructure of what was called ‘the Licence-Permit raj’ that prevailed for nearly 40 years after India became a free  Republic.

    The people born since 1991 may be less aware of India’s dire economic and political situation when a new government took office. Prime Minister Narasimha Rao headed a minority government. During the recent parliamentary election, former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi had been assassinated. Two previous governments had collapsed after short tenures. The prevailing political instability offered no hope of India coming out of the political mess combined with an economic crisis. Militancy and violence had peaked in the states of Punjab and J&K. There was social and political unrest in several parts of India. India’s external environment was in flux, due to the break-up of the Soviet Union and unprecedented internal political changes in Europe. The international oil prices had risen, worsening India’s economic woes. Both within the ruling Congress party and the opposition consisting of BJP, left parties, and influential sections of the Indian business were opposed to economic reforms. Rao government was criticized by the latter as having compromised India’s sovereignty. He responded by presciently asserting that the reforms would go to make India an engine of growth in Asia and the world economy.

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    Narendra’s book is an insider account of the working of the government that had embarked on changing India’s approach to the economy and the internal politics of the times. It attempts to answer several questions which had been aired in those years-Was Rao an economic reformer? Did he slow down the pace of changes? Is Narasimha Rao legacy limited to the demolition of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya and stood accused as contributed to the destruction of the Masjid because he was ‘indecisive’? A few major scandals and scams (Harshad Mehta Stock market scam) broke out, damaging his government’s image as corrupt. What was the prime minister’s approach to them?

    The book Tipping Pont interestingly offers an account of the way prime minister Rao leveraged his economic reforms to subtly transform India’s foreign policy giving it greater economic content which remarkably changed the perception of India abroad. Further, the first time there is an account of how the former prime minister brought normalcy in the militancy-ridden J&K. The chapter on ‘Was Narasimha Rao an economic reformer? tries to put on record his extensive new initiatives to change the economic structure of India and makes for boring reading. What is interesting is that the author offers an explanation for making his finance minister Dr Manmohan Singh the face of his economic policy, rarely claiming credit for himself.

    The readers may or may not agree with Narendra’s version of the development and events dealt with in the book. However, it could serve as a source for political historians researching into a critical period in India’s recent history.

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    #Indias #Tipping #Point #view #Racecourse #Road

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )