News accross India , Month of June

Pintu

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/City/Delhi/Palika-a-haven-for-adult-toys/articleshow/576431.cms

Palika a haven for adult toys
Atul Sethi, TNN, Nov 26, 2006, 12.19am IST

NEW DELHI: It's the worst kept secret in town. If you want to buy a porn CD, all you need to do is stroll into Palika Bazaar — the unofficial porn CD haven of the Capital — and pick up whatever you like. And now, the market has another claim to fame: it's fast emerging as a centre for smuggled adult toys too.

The moment you enter the underground market and walk close to any of the shops stocking electronic goods & CDs, you are greeted with hushed whispers of "Kya chahiye? Kya chalega? '' For the uninitiated, this is the clarion call of porn peddlers who have now added to their repertoire, besides CDs, an assortment of sex toys, most of them smuggled in from China.

Says a regular at the market, "The demand for these toys is quite high and even shops selling clothes and electronic goods have begun to stock them." The range of toys include vibrators and strap-on dildos, which come in different variations, including one with a remote. The hottest selling items, according to a peddler, are inflatable dolls. These dolls, made of latex, can be blown up to the height of an adult female — some even come with removable body parts.

Prices for the toys vary, depending on the customer. For example, the dolls, smuggled in from the US, are priced at Rs 9,000 initially but bargaining can bring the cost down to at least a third of that. And, reportedly, there's no dearth of takers according to a shopkeeper, he sells at least 10-15 of these every month.

The brisk sale of these toys clearly indicates that a huge market exists for them. In India, however, these toys are banned, which begs the question whether such a ban is justified.

Globally, the market for adult toys is massive, valued at approximately $15 billion annually, and growing at the rate of 30%. Sexologists say that the ban in India on these toys is ridiculous, since they are the safest, best and cheapest form of sexual entertainment.

Says Dr Prakash Kothari, professor of sexual medicine at Mumbai's KEM Hospital, "Adult toys are an innocent form of satisfying sexual desires. They also help in facilitating safe sex thus preventing unwanted pregnancies, controlling population growth and spread of HIV." It's an irony, he says, that while the government is ready to distribute free condoms, it is banning sex toys, which help in sex education and promote safe sex. China, incidentally, is the world's largest exporter of sex toys, accounting for 70% of global production. The country's sex toy industry provides employment to millions and is also a major forex earner.

In fact, the use of sex toys in India is nothing new. These toys, according to Kothari, find a mention in Vatsyanana's Kamasutra , where there are references to apadravyas (dildos) and life-size pratimas (wooden figures) being used in the sexual act.

"It's time we shed our pseudo-moralistic attitude," says Kothari. "In our country, the biggest challenge is controlling population and propagating safe sex. If the sex toy industry is helping in doing so and also creates a profitable sector in the economy, why shouldn't it be encouraged and legalised?" he questions.

Till this question is answered, sex toys will probably continue to sell surreptitiously in markets like Palika Bazaar.
 

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http://www.ptinews.com/news/701128_...ed-against-Lt-Gen-Nanda-on-misconduct-charges

Court of inquiry ordered against Lt Gen Nanda on misconduct charges


File photo of Lt General AK Nanda, Engineer-in-Chief,
who faces allegations of misconduct. PTI Photo

STAFF WRITER 19:26 HRS IST

New Delhi, Jun 8 (PTI) The Army today ordered a Court of Inquiry (CoI) into charges of sexual misconduct levelled against its Engineer-in-Chief Lt Gen A K Nanda by the wife of a subordinate officer.

"A Court of Inquiry has been ordered to investigate the charges levelled against Lt Gen Nanda by the wife of a Colonel," a senior officer in the Army headquarters said here.

The CoI will be headed by a Lt General senior to Nanda.

Nanda would continue to remain in the post of Engineer-in-Chief during the course of the CoI, the officer said.

The wife of a Colonel, who worked as Technical Secretary to Nanda, has accused the Lt General of molesting her during an official visit to Israel last month.

Nanda had headed an eight-member delegation of army officials from his department and some of them were accompanied by their spouses.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Aircraft-runs-into-tarmac-lights/articleshow/6030735.cms

Aircraft runs into tarmac lights
Chinmayi Shalya, TNN, Jun 10, 2010, 07.03am IST

MUMBAI: The main runway at Mumbai airport was shut for operations yet again on Wednesday morning after the runway lights were broken by a departing flight.

Delays — almost more than an hour — marred the flight schedules as flyers waited for the airlines to announce boarding. The runway was shut for almost 50 minutes before damage could be remedied and runway made clear for operations. Incidentally, the closure coincided with busiest hour for departing flights at the airport. On Tuesday, the main runway was shut for five hours for emergency reapirs, leading to delays.

The main runway (09-27) was shut for operations around 8.10 am to clear glass pieces of lights broken by a departing flight. Officials said that a courier firm's flight to Bangalore hit the runway lights while it was rolling for a take-off. "Apparently, the aircraft was not aligned to the runway central line. While rolling for a take-off at 5.19am, the pilot hit the runway lights towards the left side. In an effort to align it, the pilot ended up swerving the aircraft to the other side, breaking the lights there as well," an airport official said.

The matter, however, came to light after the flight landed in Bangalore. This is third occasion in the past one week, where taxiway or runway lights have gone out.

"Officials from Bangalore airport found a piece of metal stuck in the wheel and the aircraft fuselage. After that intimation the runway was closed for inspection and clearing up glass pieces of the runway edge lights which were broken as an aircraft had hit them while departing," a Mumbai International Airport Pvt Ltd (MIAL) spokesperson said. "As many as 18 lights were broken," he added.

Many airport officials, however, said it could have been likely that the lights were already broken. "An aircraft will suffer damages if it hits 18 lights, located at least two to three metres from each other. Also, runway lights are in use during the early hours of the morning. It is curious that other flights took off despite the lights being broken. No pilot reported either the lack of lights nor the presence of glass pieces on the runway," an official said.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/India-is-worlds-road-deaths-capital/articleshow/6023344.cms

India is world's road deaths capital
Heather Timmons and Hari Kumar, NYT News Service, Jun 8, 2010, 01.13pm IST

NEW DELHI: India lives in its villages, Gandhi said. But increasingly, the people of India are dying on its roads.

India overtook China to top the world in road fatalities in 2006 and has continued to pull steadily ahead, despite a heavily agrarian population, fewer people than China and far fewer cars than many Western countries.

While road deaths in many other big emerging markets have declined or stabilized in recent years, even as vehicle sales jumped, in India, fatalities are skyrocketing — up 40 percent in five years to more than 118,000 in 2008, the last figure available.

A lethal brew of poor road planning, inadequate law enforcement, a surge in trucks and cars, and a flood of untrained drivers have made India the world's road death capital. As the country's fast-growing economy and huge population raise its importance on the world stage, the rising toll is a reminder that the government still struggles to keep its more than a billion people safe.

In China, by contrast, which has undergone an auto boom of its own, official figures for road deaths have been falling for much of the past decade, to 73,500 in 2008, as new highways segregate cars from pedestrians, tractors and other slow-moving traffic, and the government cracks down on drunken driving and other violations.

Evidence of road accidents seems to be everywhere in urban India.

Highways and city intersections often glitter with smears of broken windshield and are scattered with unmatched shoes, shorn-off bicycle seats and bits of motorcycle helmet. Tales of rolled-over trucks and speeding buses are a newspaper staple, and it is rare to meet someone in urban India who has not lost a family member, friend or colleague on the road.

The dangerous state of the roads represents a "total failure on the part of the government of India," said Rakesh Singh, whose 16-year-old son, Akshay, was killed last year by an out-of-control truck in Bijnor, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, as he walked along a highway to a wedding.

The truck crushed Akshay so completely that his father could identify his son only by his shirt. The truck also ran over a second man and drove away.

Reckless driving and the juxtaposition of pedestrians and fast-moving heavy vehicles is common. The expressway that runs southeast from Delhi to Greater Noida, a fast-growing satellite city, cuts through farmland interspersed with new industrial parks and shopping malls. Small settlements of huts piled with cow-dung patties fringe the road.

During a 40-minute ride on that highway, a tractor hauling gravel was seen driving the wrong way, a milk truck stopped in the road so its driver could urinate and motorists swerved to avoid a bicycle cart full of wooden tables in the fast lane. Drivers chatted on mobile phones as they steered stick-shift cars and wove across lanes. Side mirrors were often turned in or were nonexistent.

A cluster of women in saris holding small children waited anxiously for a gap in traffic so they could race across the highway. Opposite them, a group of young men in office attire waited to cross in the other direction.

The breakdown in road safety has many causes, experts say. Often, the police are too stretched to enforce existing traffic laws or take bribes to ignore them; heavy vehicles, pedestrians, bullock carts and bicycles share roadways; punishment for violators is lenient, delayed or nonexistent; and driver's licenses are easy to get with a bribe.

Kamal Nath, India's minister of road transport and highways, said in an interview that highway safety was a "priority" for the national government. "Road safety is one of the major issues" the ministry is addressing, he said. The ministry is reviewing the Motor Vehicles Act and, three years after a government-backed committee recommended that a national road safety board be established, it has introduced legislation to that effect in Parliament.

International safety experts say the Indian government has been slow to act. Bringing down road deaths "requires political commitment at the highest level," said Dr. Etienne Krug, director of the department of violence and injury prevention at the World Health Organization. India's government is "just waking up to the issue," he said.

Mr. Nath, who was India's commerce minister before moving to the Highway Ministry last year, has increased highway expansion plans and is raising $45 billion from private investors to extend India's 3.3-million-kilometer, or 2-million-mile, road network. The expansion is an integral part of keeping the economy, now at about 9 percent growth a year, humming, Mr. Nath says.

Government planners warn that fatalities are unlikely to decline soon.

When highways ...(Continued on next page)

are built, "there are always more accidents," said Atul Kumar, chief general manager of road safety with the National Highways Authority of India, part of Mr. Nath's ministry.

Mr. Kumar said that his agency had spoken with local residents before building and expanding roads near towns and villages but that it could not always satisfy them. "If we accept all their demands, we'd have an underpass every kilometer," he said. The expansion has to be "viable for bidders," he said, and "underpasses and flyovers are expensive."

In the rest of the world, a rise in high-speed roads does not always have to mean a rise in deaths. In Brazil, for example, new, privatized highways have much lower rates of fatal accidents than other roads.

Private companies building and running new highways in India say that their hands are sometimes tied. From his office overlooking a 32-lane set of tollbooths, Manoj Aggarwal, chief executive of the road-building company Delhi-Gurgaon Super Connectivity, says he witnesses hundreds of traffic violations every day that he cannot stop.

"Look at this man in the middle of the road," he said during an interview, pointing to a pedestrian slowly weaving his way through the traffic. "I can't fine him. I can't punish him."

Only the police can ticket or fine speeders, or people who are on the roads but should not be. But, over-burdened and understaffed, the police are rarely available, Mr. Aggarwal said, even though he has offered to pay them extra to work on off-duty hours.

In 2008, 73 people were killed on just this 27-kilometer stretch of highway, earning it the nickname "Expressway to Death." The death toll dropped as Mr. Aggarwal added safety features outside the government contract.

Shivani, a 15-year-old student, recently landed in St. Stephen's Hospital in Old Delhi with a fractured right leg after just such a highway dash.

"I don't know what happened," she said. "I was trying to cross the road." Her forehead and knuckles were blackened and scraped, and her eyes were glazed after a four-day coma.

She has to cross a busy highway during her one-kilometer walk to school. There are no crosswalks, no underpasses and no stoplights.

As cars increase, those who cannot afford them and continue to travel on foot, bicycle or rickshaw are more vulnerable, safety experts say. Dr. Mathew Varghese, the head of St. Stephen's orthopedics department, said he saw hundreds of patients a year like Shivani. The government is building "economic growth on the dead bodies of the poor on these highways," he said.

Frustrated Indians often take matters into their own hands, forming impromptu mobs to beat up offending drivers. "Road rage" incidents, where drivers step out of their cars and get into physical altercations, have become common. Some people have begun campaigns to curb unsafe driving.

"People don't understand the value of life here," said Manoj Gupta, a consultant from Chandigarh, whose wife was riding a motor scooter when she was crushed by a speeding bus two years ago. Helmet laws apply only to men, and she was not wearing one. The bus driver was out on bail in four or five days, Mr. Gupta said. Now Mr. Gupta stops reckless drivers to tell them about his wife and to ask them to drive more carefully.

Safety "needs to be an important part of the driving culture, and that is still lacking," said Harman S. Sidhu, president of ArriveSafe, a road safety awareness group in Chandigarh. He started it after he was left paralyzed by a car accident in the Himalayas.

Last year during Raksha Bandhan, a festival celebrating the bond between brothers and sisters, ArriveSafe enlisted thousands of sisters to beg their brothers to drive carefully.

Mr. Singh, the father of Akshay, the boy killed by a truck in Bijnor, said he had spent days searching for the driver who ran over his son after the local police refused to help, finally taking the police in his own car to make the arrest. Megh Singh, the investigating police officer for the case, said in an interview that the police were eager to investigate but hampered because the station has only one jeep for its 18 to 20 inspectors.

The truck driver, now awaiting trial on charges of negligent death in Akshay's case and murder in a second man's case, has been released on bail. The truck, which appeared to be carrying an illegally heavy load, was returned to its owner without incurring any fees or fines.

Dozens of letters Mr. Singh wrote to local and national politicians asking them to investigate overloaded trucks in the area have not been answered.

"No one wants to be responsible," he said. "They are all passing the buck."

are built, "there are always more accidents," said Atul Kumar, chief general manager of road safety with the National Highways Authority of India, part of Mr. Nath's ministry.

Mr. Kumar said that his agency had spoken with local residents before building and expanding roads near towns and villages but that it could not always satisfy them. "If we accept all their demands, we'd have an underpass every kilometer," he said. The expansion has to be "viable for bidders," he said, and "underpasses and flyovers are expensive."

In the rest of the world, a rise in high-speed roads does not always have to mean a rise in deaths. In Brazil, for example, new, privatized highways have much lower rates of fatal accidents than other roads.

Private companies building and running new highways in India say that their hands are sometimes tied. From his office overlooking a 32-lane set of tollbooths, Manoj Aggarwal, chief executive of the road-building company Delhi-Gurgaon Super Connectivity, says he witnesses hundreds of traffic violations every day that he cannot stop.

"Look at this man in the middle of the road," he said during an interview, pointing to a pedestrian slowly weaving his way through the traffic. "I can't fine him. I can't punish him."

Only the police can ticket or fine speeders, or people who are on the roads but should not be. But, over-burdened and understaffed, the police are rarely available, Mr. Aggarwal said, even though he has offered to pay them extra to work on off-duty hours.

In 2008, 73 people were killed on just this 27-kilometer stretch of highway, earning it the nickname "Expressway to Death." The death toll dropped as Mr. Aggarwal added safety features outside the government contract.

Shivani, a 15-year-old student, recently landed in St. Stephen's Hospital in Old Delhi with a fractured right leg after just such a highway dash.

"I don't know what happened," she said. "I was trying to cross the road." Her forehead and knuckles were blackened and scraped, and her eyes were glazed after a four-day coma.

She has to cross a busy highway during her one-kilometer walk to school. There are no crosswalks, no underpasses and no stoplights.

As cars increase, those who cannot afford them and continue to travel on foot, bicycle or rickshaw are more vulnerable, safety experts say. Dr. Mathew Varghese, the head of St. Stephen's orthopedics department, said he saw hundreds of patients a year like Shivani. The government is building "economic growth on the dead bodies of the poor on these highways," he said.

Frustrated Indians often take matters into their own hands, forming impromptu mobs to beat up offending drivers. "Road rage" incidents, where drivers step out of their cars and get into physical altercations, have become common. Some people have begun campaigns to curb unsafe driving.

"People don't understand the value of life here," said Manoj Gupta, a consultant from Chandigarh, whose wife was riding a motor scooter when she was crushed by a speeding bus two years ago. Helmet laws apply only to men, and she was not wearing one. The bus driver was out on bail in four or five days, Mr. Gupta said. Now Mr. Gupta stops reckless drivers to tell them about his wife and to ask them to drive more carefully.

Safety "needs to be an important part of the driving culture, and that is still lacking," said Harman S. Sidhu, president of ArriveSafe, a road safety awareness group in Chandigarh. He started it after he was left paralyzed by a car accident in the Himalayas.

Last year during Raksha Bandhan, a festival celebrating the bond between brothers and sisters, ArriveSafe enlisted thousands of sisters to beg their brothers to drive carefully.

Mr. Singh, the father of Akshay, the boy killed by a truck in Bijnor, said he had spent days searching for the driver who ran over his son after the local police refused to help, finally taking the police in his own car to make the arrest. Megh Singh, the investigating police officer for the case, said in an interview that the police were eager to investigate but hampered because the station has only one jeep for its 18 to 20 inspectors.

The truck driver, now awaiting trial on charges of negligent death in Akshay's case and murder in a second man's case, has been released on bail. The truck, which appeared to be carrying an illegally heavy load, was returned to its owner without incurring any fees or fines.

Dozens of letters Mr. Singh wrote to local and national politicians asking them to investigate overloaded trucks in the area have not been answered.

"No one wants to be responsible," he said. "They are all passing the buck."
 

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http://www.ptinews.com/news/705579_IFC-files-cheating-case-against-Sanjay-Gadhvi

IFC files cheating case against Sanjay Gadhvi

STAFF WRITER 15:28 HRS IST

Mumbai, Jun 10 (PTI) The Indian Film Company (IFC) has filed a criminal case of cheating against director Sanjay Gadhvi in a Delhi court for failing to submit the final script of a film on two occasions.

The IFC has claimed losses of Rs 5.2 crore due to the 'Dhoom' director and a case has been filed under section 420 of the IPC.

The complaint came up before the Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, New Delhi on June 5.

The Court recorded that there is sufficient material to proceed with the complaint and has now kept the matter for recording evidence, IFC sources said here today.

Indian Films had signed Gadhvi for two films in January 2008 and conceptually approved the first film, '7 days in Paris' in October 2008.

After that IFC approached Imran Khan and Katrina Kaif for the lead roles and both gave their consent to the project.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...on-against-principal-/articleshow/6037561.cms

Student's suicide: WB Govt unable to take action against principal
ANI, Jun 11, 2010, 04.55pm IST

KOLKATA: West Bengal School Education Minister Partha Dey on Friday said, "The State Government is unable to take any action against the Principal of La Martiniere Boys' School, for the caning and humiliation of 13-year-old student Rouvanjit, who committed suicide."

Interacting with media, Dey also said that the Government's hands are tied and the only available recourse for the future, is to set up an authority under the Right to Education Act to safeguard the interests of children in schools.

"An authority can be set up under a State Act. It can supercede the schools with minority status, and parents teachers can complain before authorities," Dey added.

In a shocking development, the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) probing the case has revealed that the Principal of La Martiniere School for Boys, admitted to caning Class VIII student Rouvanjit Rawla, who committed suicide on February 12 this year. Reportedly, Principal Sunirmal Chakravarthy is unrepentant, and even confessed to Kolkata Bishop Ashok Biswas - who heads the Church of North India (CNI) that runs the school.

The NCPCR report found that corporal punishments were in fact a norm at the school, as alleged by Rouvanjit's parents. It is expected to submit the report in New Delhi soon. According to a probe committee member, Ashok Agarwal, the environment at La Martiniere has been extremely unsuitable for children. Rouvanjit had committed suicide by hanging himself on Febuary 12, 2010.

The class eight student was forced to take this drastic step after months of humiliation, allegedly at the hands of his teachers.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...njit-doesnt-repent-it/articleshow/6035221.cms

Principal says he caned Rouvanjit, doesn't repent it
TNN, Jun 11, 2010, 04.21am IST

KOLKATA: The principal of La Martiniere School for Boys has admitted to caning Class VIII student Rouvanjit Rawla, who committed suicide on February 12 this year after he was allegedly "humiliated and beaten" in school. Principal Sunirmal Chakravarthy even 'confessed' to Kolkata bishop Ashok Biswas — who heads the Church of North India that runs the school — but got away with a mere reprimand.

The probe team of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) revealed this to TOI on Thursday. If it is true, La Marts for Boys stands guilty of corporal punishment, which was banned by the Bengal government three years ago.

Sunirmal Chakravarthy is the focus of a two-pronged probe by the police and the NCPCR over Rouvanjit's suicide. According to a member of the child rights team, he told them he had caned the 13-year-old boy "for mischief" and does not repent it. He, in fact, defended the medieval spare-the-rod-and-spoil-the-child philosophy as an "effective means to discipline school kids", said a commission member.

The three-member NCPCR team will put these findings in its report and make a strong recommendation to the commission to take such schools to task, say sources. NCPCR members said Bishop Biswas had presided over a meeting of the six-member board of acting governors of the Church of North India (CNI), where the school principal had admitted to caning students. The CNI runs La Martiniere School for Boys and Girls among many other leading schools.

Why didn't the La Marts administration take steps against the principal? "The bishop stopped short of taking strong steps. He reprimanded the principal for caning Rouvanjit," said a commission member who met the bishop. Calls and SMSes from TOI to the bishop and Chakravarthy were unanswered.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...olice-suspect-suicide/articleshow/6035224.cms

IBM techie falls to death, police suspect suicide
TNN, Jun 11, 2010, 04.23am IST

KOLKATA: A 26-year-old software professional working for IBM at its DLF Building office in Salt Lake's Sector V fell to his death from the 10th floor flat in Rajarhat, which he shared with four colleagues.

Police aren't sure whether Raj Sekhar, a resident of Vizianagaram in Andhra Pradesh, committed suicide or fell from the balcony by accident. His friends told the police Sekhar was depressed for the last few days and would often speak out of context. Sekhar and his friends occupied Flat-11D of Suktara Tower in Greenfield Complex under the Kolkata Leather Complex police station.

Around 5.30 pm, security guards Biswajit Mondal and Paran Saha were on their routine rounds when they heard a thud. They found Sekhar lying face down on the concrete, about six to seven feet from the entrance to the basement. He was dressed in a sleeveless vest and a pair of shorts. The guards informed the police.
The complex has a dozen towers and only a few of the flats are occupied. The Suktara Tower has 17 floors. Senior police officers said prima facie it looked like a case of suicide but were trying to find out if Sekhar was inebriated.

A friend said Sekhar had returned from a seven-day vacation on Tuesday. "He was behaving abnormally ever since he returned. He turned forgetful and would speak gibberish. He was a bright student and had a great future ahead," he said.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kolkata-/Warrant-against-CPM-MLA/articleshow/6034811.cms

Warrant against CPM MLA
TNN, Jun 11, 2010, 04.45am IST

A non-bailable arrest warrant has been issued against the CPM MLA from Kaliachak, Biswanath Ghosh, and six others on a complaint filed by the railways.

On the night of September 8, 2009, a mob led by Ghosh blocked the tracks at Khaltipur station for nine hours, demanding that some express trains be made to halt there. At least 15 trains were stranded because of the flash blockade. The mob ransacked the station. The next morning, the railways lodged a complaint against Ghosh.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ld-for-bank-job-fraud/articleshow/6034810.cms

Girl, parents held for bank job fraud
TNN, Jun 11, 2010, 04.45am IST

KOLKATA: A couple and their 23-year-old daughter were arrested on Thursday for allegedly duping several youths of lakhs by promising them jobs in a bank. Police say Debatari Bhaduri, who used to work in a finance firm, used the customer database to pick her victims.

Debatari, her father Rabindra Narayan Bhaduri, 55, and mother Susmita, 48, were nabbed from their home in 2K/1A, Gopal Chandra Bose Lane in Sinthee and produced in court. They were remanded to police custody.

According to police, the entire family was involved in the fraud. They allegedly promised job-seekers a staff position in Union Bank of India.

Rabindra Narayan used to claim that his brother held an important post in UBI and could grant many jobs since "senior employees in the nationalized bank had a quota in job vacancies".

Police claim that Debatari used her work experience in a finance company to build a database of people that could be targeted. Telephone numbers from the customer database came handy in their operation. The young woman would call up the numbers randomly and lay traps to lure unemployed youths, say investigators.

Those who responded to her calls were referred to her father. The senior Bhaduri would then take up the case further. He would convince the victims that they had a fair chance of getting employed because his younger brother had enough clout in the bank.

Rabindra Narayan then would ask the victims to deposit the "processing fee", which ranged from anything between Rs 10,000 to 100,000 for jobs that from that of a peon to that of an officer, say police. If any victim got discouraged, he would offer a relaxation', saying that they could pay in installments.

"Our primary probe reveals that the trio duped at least nine persons and they have been operating for the past five to six months. There could be more victims," said deputy commissioner (detective department) Damayanti Sen.

The family's luck ran out on Wednesday when Suraj Shah, a victim, lodged a complaint with Sinthee police station. He alleged that he had paid the Bhaduris Rs 1 lakh through a bank draft but not got the promised job with UBI. This was the only time the family slipped up. They had taken cash from all other job-seekers but took a draft from Suraj. It was easy to track them down from the bank records.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...n-Minister-on-June-14/articleshow/6037067.cms

Arrest petition of Lankan Minister on June 14
PTI, Jun 11, 2010, 03.04pm IST

CHENNAI: The Madras High Court today posted to June 14 a petition seeking direction to the Centre to take immediate steps for the arrest of Sri Lankan Minister Douglas Devananda, who is part of the visiting Presidential delegation, in connection with a 1986 murder case.

When the petition by a pro-Sri Lankan Tamil forum came up for hearing, Chief Justice M Y Eqbal and Justice T S Sivagnanam posted it for further hearing on June 14.

Earlier, M Radhakrishnan, counsel for the petitioner, mentioned before the court about taking up the petition as it is related to the issue of arrest of a visiting foreign minister.

In the petition, P Pugalenthi, Secretary of Tamil Nadu Peoples Rights Forum, a pro-Sri Lankan Tamils body, contended that the VIth Additional Sessions Judge in June 1994 had issued a proclamation warrant against Douglas Devananda, treating him as an 'absconding accused' in the case relating to the killing of a city resident in 1986.

Submitting that charges had been framed against Devananda on January 20, 1987, for various offences under IPC, including murder and Indian Arms Act, Pugalenthi said Devananda was currently on a visit to India accompanying Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse and the police 'are supposed to do their duty and arrest him immediately, he being an 'absconding person'.

The petitioner said the minister was also wanted in two other cases.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...tive-meeting-tomorrow/articleshow/6036504.cms

BJP National Executive meeting tomorrow
PTI, Jun 11, 2010, 12.54pm IST

PATNA: After the political setback in Jharkhand, BJP will fine-tune its election strategy in poll-bound Bihar at its National Executive meeting beginning tomorrow.

The two-day meet will see the launch of the party's campaign in the key state where it is a major partner in the JD(U) led government.

Bihar is practically the first electoral challenge for the party since 53-year old Nitin Gadkari took over the reins.

With stakes high in Bihar, the party is expected to go all out against the Congress-led UPA at the Centre for its alleged step motherly treatment towards non-Congress states.

Two resolutions being passed in the executive are related to the governance of the UPA including one focussing on its performance in the last one year. Failure of the Centre to control rising prices and Naxalism would also figure in the resolutions.

"The top BJP leadership will minutely scrutinise the UPA government's performance in reference to its handling of terrorism and economy, Naxalite insurgency and the step motherly treatment meted to non-Congress, non-UPA governments in the states," party's spokesman Ravi Shankar Prasad said.

The meet would also target the Congress over the Bhopal gas tragedy and the way Warren Anderson, the then CEO of Union Carbide escaped from the country.

A 'Rashtriya Swabhiman'(national pride) rally will be held at the conclusion of the meet which will be addressed by top party leaders signalling the launch of the Bihar campaign.

Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi is expected to be a prominent speaker in the rally. This will be Modi's first visit to Bihar after becoming chief minister in October 2001.

Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had expressed reservations about Modi campaigning in the state in the 2009 Lok Sabha elections.

Interestingly, Gujarat government has given advertisements in newspapers here pointing out how Muslims in Gujarat are better placed in terms of education, employment opportunities, financial stability, health facilities and infrastructure.

Though Modi has been the star campaigner of BJP in other states, the party here was less inclined to use him during the poll campaign.

The contentious issue of caste census on which BJP stands divided, is likely to come up for discussion at the meet. Party veteran Murli Manohar Joshi has already said that he would raise the issue at the national executive.The party is likely to set up a small group to go into the issue.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ctivist-Ashley-Tellis/articleshow/6034644.cms

IIT-H sacks gay activist Ashley Tellis
Nikhila Henry, TNN, Jun 11, 2010, 12.36am IST

HYDERABAD: In an AMU redux south of the Vindhyas, Indian Institute of Technology (Hyderabad) management sacked gay rights activist and faculty member Ashley Tellis, apparently discomfited by his sexual orientation. The academic, with around 20 years of experience, was shown the door last fortnight less than a year after joining IIT-H.

Being on probation, Tellis's services were terminated summarily. However, reliable sources said he was asked to leave for his "unlawful behaviour" and "deviant mischief". IIT-Hyderabad director Uday Desai did not take calls and his office said he would be available only after June 21.

It's learnt that Tellis's exit from IIT was being planned by the management ever since AMU's S R Siras was sacked for being gay in February this year. Tellis has filed a right to information (RTI) application seeking reasons behind his sudden termination and intends to have a face-off with IIT-H.

Tellis was assistant professor with the liberal arts department and is a well-known voice in the gay rights movement in the country. A published author, Tellis has a PhD from Cambridge University and a long teaching career. He faced strong resistance at IIT-H from the day he joined. "Ashley's entry was controversial with several groups among IIT faculty not wanting him in. There was internal bickering and resistance right from the beginning," said a source. Prior to Tellis's appointment, several faculty members had objected to his appointment.

"There were group mails sent against his appointment, asking the IIT director not to appoint him," a source said.

Some faculty members blamed Tellis for being too candid in discussing gay issues on campus. His article on `man-boy' love in a national daily further ruffled feathers. "The institute has a humanities wing but it is meant for technical education. It was found that students were extremely annoyed with Tellis's behaviour," said a faculty member.

However, a number of students disagreed with the faculty members. "He was one of the best teachers. Not many students had problems with him until the administration and other faculty members began asking questions about Tellis's behaviour in classroom," said a student. Students were even told to "be careful" with Tellis and "report abuse", the student said.

When contacted, university authorities refused comment saying only the director was authorized to answer these questions. "Tellis is no longer with us. We do not know whether he was sacked or left on his own," said an official in the director's office. A scan of IIT-Hyderabad website revealed that Tellis's name has been deleted from the faculty list.

Director in charge U V Varadaraju, when insisted upon by TOI, said, "Prof Desai is out of station." Sudheer Chella Rajan, HoD of Liberal Arts Department and Tellis's boss could not be reached despite attempts.

Tellis's close associates said that this is not the first time he was targeted for being gay. He had complained of being forced to quit or being terminated for being articulate about gay rights even earlier. His stints at Bombay University, where he taught in 1991, and later at St Stephen's College, Delhi, too weren't pleasant for Tellis, and he quit both jobs.

"Tellis was under constant pressure of being sacked even during his stint at English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad," said one of his associates.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ted-on-murder-charges/articleshow/6036440.cms

Woman, godman arrested on murder charges
PTI, Jun 11, 2010, 12.39pm IST

GHAZIABAD: A self-styled godman and a woman were arrested for allegedly killing her husband, police said on Friday.

Jagmati (47) and godman Brahamchari Dulan Nath (65) were arrested yesterday for murdering her husband when he objected to their love affair in Garhmukteshwar, SP Rural M M Beg.

Jagmati took her husband and son for treatment to the godman and fell in love with him. She along with Nath hatched a plan to kill her husband.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...easier-to-get-divorce/articleshow/6029884.cms

Govt to consider making it easier to get divorce
Mahendra Kumar Singh & Himanshi Dhawan, TNN, Jun 10, 2010, 12.24am IST

NEW DELHI: Sparring couples may now have a way out of their misery without having to go through the blame game. The Cabinet on Thursday is expected to consider a proposal to amend matrimonial laws for making "irretrievable breakdown of marriage" a ground for divorce.

The proposal moved by law ministry suggests amendment to the Hindu Marriage Act 1955 and Special Marriage Act 1954 to add the new basis for granting divorce.

Breakdown of marriage is currently not a ground for divorce despite several Supreme Court verdicts favouring it and the Law Commission recommending that it be included in the provision of the law.

The amendment will enable couples to get divorce if one of them refuses to live with the other and will not work towards reconciliation, and the court is convinced that there is no hope of the two leading a normal matrimonial life.

The legal fraternity seems to be split over the proposed amendment. Some experts feel that growing individuality in society has contributed to an increasing number of cases ending at the divorce court with both parties dishing out dirty laundry. The amendment would make parting of ways less bitter.

But several other experts warned of pitfalls in the proposed law. Eminent lawyer Kamini Jaiswal felt the amendment may not be a "bad idea" for urban women wanting to opt out of a relationship, but it may adversely impact rural women who have few options. "I feel there should be a comprehensive look at all laws relating to maintenance and alimony instead of a piecemeal look at one amendment," she added.

Kirti Singh, former Law Commission member described the amendment as "disastrous" if it came without adequate safeguards. "The amendment should only be brought when women are given adequate share in household assets and maintenance. Most women get a pittance from the courts and most do not want to get out of a marriage only because there is nothing to sustain them outside it," she said, adding that this would only provide relief to men.

According to the existing Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, divorce can be granted on three grounds -- matrimonial fault, divorce by mutual consent and frustration due to specified circumstances.

According to the first ground, marriage can be dissolved when either spouse has committed a matrimonial offence. Under this provision, it is necessary to have a guilty and an innocent party in matrimonial dispute and only the innocent party can seek divorce.

Divorce on mutual consent is based on the fact that since two persons can marry by their free will, they should also be allowed to move out of their relationship if both agree to do so.

Under "frustration by reason of specified circumstances", divorce can be granted to a person whose spouse has met with "civil death" -- disappeared without a trace for at least seven years -- or renounced the world.

The law commission in its report points out that the ground of matrimonial fault is not always sufficient for divorce and may cause injustice in disputes where the marriage cannot work although none of the parties is at fault, or the fault is of such a nature that the parties to the marriage do not want to reveal it.

The report suggests that in such circumstances it will be in the interest of justice to dissolve the marriage through the proposed amendment.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...t-days-before-wedding/articleshow/6039086.cms

Fiance kills BPO staffer just days before wedding
Dwaipayan Ghosh, TNN, Jun 12, 2010, 01.04am IST

NEW DELHI: A 22-year-old BPO executive employed by a multinational giant in Gurgaon was allegedly smothered to death by her fiance, who works for another global major, less than a week before the two were to get married.

The murder took place on Wednesday night but came to light on Friday, when the girl's parents arrived in the capital and broke into her rented accommodation at Madangir in southeast Delhi.

The Ambedkar Nagar police have arrested the accused, Ravi Mishra, 27, who has confessed to the crime. Mishra was apparently reluctant to commit to the relationship and the two had an argument at the girl's residence on the fateful night. Police said Ravi hit the victim, Monica Jaiswal, with a heavy object, then smothered her. He left the body in the room and left after locking the place.

To cover his tracks, Ravi returned to Monica's house twice and even asked the neighbours about her whereabouts when the girl's family, based in Kanpur, sought his help in locating the girl.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...p-in-front-of-her-son/articleshow/6030050.cms

Woman claims city cops made her strip in front of her son
Dwaipayan Ghosh, TNN, Jun 10, 2010, 12.56am IST

NEW DELHI: A 30-year-old woman has alleged that cops at a west Delhi police post forced her to strip in the presence of her minor son and demanded that she had sex with him, all because the 12-year-old boy had been accused of stealing money from a car.

Mayuri, a resident of Mayapuri slum cluster, claimed that police officers and a woman constable were present at the post when the incident took place. She has lodged a written complaint with the police commissioner. The area DCP, Sharad Aggarwal, has order an inquiry into the incident. The local police deny the charge and say the boy was a member of the thak-thak gang that targets cars at traffic lights and was taken into custody in a burglary case.

Mayuri and her 45-year-old husband Satish (all names changed) said they learned on May 22 that both their sons, Raju (12) and Ramesh (10) had been detained by the police. When they went to the police, the cops allegedly abused them though they met the boys in police custody. The couple returned the next day to try and get the sons freed. That's when the real ordeal began, the family claims.

Said Mayuri, "After confining us to one room, one of the constables took my husband and younger son out of the room and locked it from inside. Then they started questioning me and Raju about the stolen goods, asking us to return Rs 6,000 which they alleged my son had stolen from a women's car."

When the duo denied the charge, a constable allegedly asked the woman to strip. "When I refused, the constable started beating me with his lathi and forced me to take my clothes off," said Mayuri.

According to the victim, the torture didn't end there. "One of the cops stepped up and asked me to have sex with my son. Both of us started crying and I begged them to let us go. Then one of the constables asked me to have sex with him instead. We begged for our life. Finally, after about one or two hours, they released us," she said.

An NGO, which heard about the incident from Mayuri's neighbours contacted the family and asked them to file a complaint with the police commissioner.

The west district police, however, refuses to buy the allegations. "We took suo motu action after we received the complaint. If we wanted, we could have hushed up the case. However, we have decided for a full investigation of the incident," said a senior district officer.

Talking to TOI, DCP Aggarwal said that the ACP (Rajouri Garden) had been asked to investigate the incident. "We have recorded the statement of both the son and his mother. We are questioning the cops on duty too. A final report will be put up soon. No case has been registered so far," said Aggarwal.

The cops said they were investigating if there was any "verbal exchange" of words. "Though such an allegation seems absurd, extreme verbal abuse by the policemen on duty could have taken place. We will need to establish if such statements were uttered at the police post though prima facie the act of stripping seems improbable. The woman has levelled these charges to protect her son," said an officer overseeing the investigations. The police have also denied allegations that they had bribed the family to withdraw their complaint.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/Toddler-gets-court-summons/articleshow/6035058.cms

Toddler gets court 'summons'
DWAIPAYAN GHOSH , TNN, Jun 11, 2010, 03.17am IST

NEW DELHI: Delhi Police's list of the bizarre seems to get longer.

A family from Kanjhawala has alleged that a two-and-half-year old baby family has been served a notice at the behest of Delhi Police for breaching the peace of the locality. In the notice served by the special executive magistrate, the child, Rehman (name changed), has been asked to be present in court on June 15 and pledge that henceforth he will not disrupt peace. Outer district police say it is a case of two persons in the family sharing the same name and the adult trying to escape punishment by using the child's name. The notice, the family says, was issued after Rehman's family allegedly had a heated argument with another group of local residents over the control of a water line in their area.

"The notice mentions the name of Rehman's grandfather Shakeel, his father Mintu, and his uncle Pintu who is also called Rehman. There is no mention of the child in the notice," said Chhaya Sharma, DCP (outer district).

Shakeel challenged the police version. "There is no one with the name of Rashid even in my extended family except my grandson. The notice served to us only mentions the name of Rashid. There is no mention of Pintu in the notice," Shakeel said.

The incident for which the notice has been served, dates back to May 20 when Shakeel's son Mintu picked up a fight with the neighbours who they allege were trying to "dig and place a new waterline illegally in front of the house." An argument ensued, which ended only after a call was made to the PCR and cops came. On May 21, both the warring parties were called to the Kanjhawala police station. "It was there that we challaned both sides and asked them to report to the SEM court. The notice which was issued on May 26 was finally sent to the family on June 1," said DCP Sharma.

She said the family was being misled. "The notice is just a restraining order to ensure peace in the area," she said. The local police, however, claimed that this was a ploy by the family to escape penalty. "The uncle is using the nephew's name to get away from the law," claimed an officer in the Kanjhawala police station.

However, the family said they will follow the police directions. "We will appear in court on June 15. We will explain our stand and tell the authorities that the police had not visited our residence even once," said Shakeel. "We are ready to look into their grievances if they contact us or appear in court on the designated day," said Sharma.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...demand-as-lucky-charm/articleshow/6039244.cms

Tihar gallows wood in demand as lucky charm
Megha Suri Singh, TNN, Jun 12, 2010, 02.45am IST

NEW DELHI: The gallows at the high-security Tihar Jail have been made out of bounds for prisoners and jail staff alike. The move has nothing to do with security concerns in the wake of increasing pressure on the government to carry out the death sentence of Mohammad Afzal Guru, who is lodged in the jail. It's actually to protect the gallows from people desperately seeking small pieces of its wood.

Over the years, a belief has spread that the wood which forms the gallows brings good luck. It supposedly assures good results for children if kept in school books and wards off fears of all kind when kept under the pillow while sleeping. People even try to scrape off pieces of the wood and wear it on their arm as a tabeez for good luck.

"The top layer of wood on the gallows was fast disappearing as people have chipped off pieces. So a few years ago, we decided to keep the area locked. But requests for the wood continue to come from all sections of society including judges, politicians, bureaucrats and even the jail staff," said a prison official. So now, only the influential manage to get that lucky piece of wood.

With 11 inmates of Tihar facing a death sentence, including Guru, the gallows are refurbished from time to time to ensure that they are always ready for an execution. This includes checking the wood and if need be, replacing it, oiling the levers and testing the apparatus. The last death sentence carried out at Tihar was way back in 1989 when the killers of late Prime Minister Indira Gandhi Satwant Singh and Kehar Singh were hanged.

With the debate on the execution of Guru's death sentence hotting up, the gallows could soon be put to use. But is Tihar ready to carry out an execution? "After a mercy petition of a convict is rejected by the President, we have to approach the sessions judge who awarded the death sentence, for a black warrant. This specifies an exact date and time for execution, which is within one week of the petition being rejected. That much time is enough for us to prepare," said Sunil Kumar Gupta, law officer, Delhi prisons.

As for the apparatus, the prison administration procured a special wax-coated rope manufactured only in Buxar Jail, soon after the apex court upheld Afzal's death sentence in 2006. The rope used for hanging weighs 3.75kg and is 16 feet long.

In 2005, the gallows located in the compound of Jail 3 were refurbished. The wooden panels and planks were given a makeover in metal and the noose handle was greased to get it back in working condition after 15 years. Since then, regular maintenance is reportedly being carried out.
 

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...n-for-stealing-Rs-15-/articleshow/6039253.cms

14-yr-old beaten up with hot pan for stealing Rs 15
Indrani Basu & Dwaipayan Ghosh, TNN, Jun 12, 2010, 02.47am IST

NEW DELHI: A 14-year-old boy was allegedly thrashed with a hot pan by his employer — his own maternal uncle — in Sadar Bazaar after the boy reportedly stole Rs 15 from the roadside dosa stall where he worked.

According to Sushil Kumar, his son Suvam was employed with Vikram, 20, for the last six months. ''On Wednesday, Vikram reportedly forced Suvam to drink alcohol when he came to know about the theft. After that, Vikram tied the boy's hands and poured alcohol over his eyes,'' alleged Sushil.

The police said their probe has found that the boy was beaten with a hot pan but there was no alcohol involved. ''We questioned the accused and found Vikram thrashed Suvam. He suffered burn injuries. The boy was sent for a medical examination to DDU Hospital from where he was referred to Sadarjung Hospital. The MLC report stated the injury was grievous. Based on the report, we have registered a case of grievous hurt,'' said R S Krishnaiya, additional commissioner (southwest).

The incident was allegedly reported to the police by Yasmeen Chaudhary, pradhan of Sadar Bazaar village and who happened to witness Vikram hitting out at the boy. ''The boy was hit the left side of his face, stomach and arms with a hot pan. Then, Vikram lashed at the boy's wrists and legs with a hot knife. He also used a belt to hit the boy's legs. The boy was in a lot of pain,'' said Yasmeen.

The police, however, said the accused had bought the child to the Delhi Cantonment police station himself and tried to implicate him in a theft case. Vikram had brought Suvam from Ghonda in UP, 100 kilometres from Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh six months ago to work for him. When his wife tried to stop him from beating the child, he reportedly beat her too, claimed neighbours.

The police said the boy has been sent to an NGO on Friday. ''We produced the boy before a child welfare committee that decided against sending him back to his father. The boy has been sent to a Delhi-based NGO,'' said Krishnaiya.
 

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