China’s industry profits stumble: Profits in November fall 13.1%; biggest decline in over a year


China's industry profits stumble: Profits in November fall 13.1%; biggest decline in over a year

China’s industrial firms saw their profits drop by 13.1 per cent in November, from last year, marking the steepest decline in over a year. This fall came despite strong exports, putting focus on country’s ongoing economic struggles and increasing pressure for more government support. The National Bureau of Statistics released these figures on Saturday, as quoted by Reuters.The decline was worse than October’s 5.5 per cent. This trend comes as China faces persistent factory-gate deflation and weak consumer spending. For the first 11 months of the year, industrial profits barely grew, showing just a 0.1% increase compared to the previous year’s 1.9% growth.“The profit numbers show a broader cooling in economic activity in the fourth quarter, mainly due to the drag from soft domestic demand,” said Xu Tianchen, senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit. However, Xu remained cautiously optimistic about future profits, suggesting companies might find more opportunities overseas.Despite this, there were some industries that managed to register gains. The automobile industry posted a 7.5 per cent rise in profitability, while the high tech industry posted a 10 per cent rise. A massive decline of 47.3 percent in profitability was seen in the coal mine industry.An estimate by the think tank, Rhodium Group, quoted by Reuters, indicated a growth of 2.5 per cent to 3 per cent in the Chinese economy for the year, which is approximately half the officially-hinted growth.Chinese policymakers are now promising more support. At a recent meeting, they pledged to maintain “proactive” fiscal policies next year. The government has also committed to improving employment, boosting consumption, stabilizing prices, and helping the struggling property market.NBS Chief Statistician Yu Weining noted that industrial firms still need stronger support, especially given the uncertain global environment and ongoing changes in growth drivers. The data covers companies earning at least 20 million yuan ($2.85 million) in annual revenue from their main operations.



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Watch: Khalistanis in UK disrupt protest by Hindus over killings in Bangladesh


Watch: Khalistanis in UK disrupt protest by Hindus over killings in Bangladesh

The protest led by the Hindu community against the killing of a Hindu man in a communally charged environment in Bangladesh was disrupted by the Khalistani miscreants outside the Bangladesh High Commission in London.Indian and Bangladeshi Hindus were outside the Bangladesh High Commission in London on Saturday when a handful of Khalistanis showed up outside in support of Bangladesh.Shattered by horrific lynchings of Dipu Chandra Das and Amrit Mondal, trapped and persecuted Hindus in Bangladesh are sending out an SOS to India to open the borders to escape Islamist mob fury. The fears were accentuated on Thursday by the groundswell of support to Bangladesh Nationalist Party leader Tarique Rahman, who’s considered a hardliner.VIDEO TOI reached out to a cross-section of Hindus residing in Rangpur, Chittagong, Dhaka and Mymensingh and spoke to them on Whatsapp call with the help of exiled Bangladesh Sanatan Jagran Macha leader, Nihar Haldar, accused of sedition along with former ISKCON monk, Chinmoy Krishna Das.The ripples could be felt in refugee pockets of Gadchiroli, Chandrapur in Maharashtra and Pakhanjur in Chhattisgarh, where Hindu immigrants from erstwhile East Pakistan were settled. Dr Subodh Biswas, president of Nikhil Bangla Samanbay Samiti, an organisation of former East Pakistan refugees, says, “Why don’t Hindu organisations get proactive? India is the only country where Hindus of Bangladesh can bank upon during a crisis. More Hindus will be killed, but borders remain shut. We plan to stage protests at the border.”“There are 2.5 crore Hindus in Bangladesh. It’s not a small number. Hindu organisations in India are doing nothing more than lip service. We are staring at a holocaust,” said a Sanatan Jagran Macha activist requesting anonymity. It’s not that there will be Hindu exodus after borders open, but we will be at least insulated from violence, said a resident of Mymensingh. “We are living the worst nightmare. Opening the Indian borders will at least create an escape route for those facing persecution,” said a Hindu from Dhaka. Many lead a hand-to-mouth existence in Bangladesh, including those like Dipu Chandra Das’ family.The acrimonious exchanges between India and Bangladesh in the past few weeks came to a head on Friday with India slamming Dhaka for “unremitting hostility” against minorities – including Hindus, Christians and Buddhists – in the country at the hands of extremists.Calling it a matter of grave concern, ministry of external affairs (MEA) condemned the recent killing of a Hindu youth in Mymensingh and stressed that the perpetrators of the crime must be brought to justice.Asked about the return of BNP acting chairman Tarique Rahman to Dhaka after 17 years, the Indian govt only said it should be seen in the context of India’s call for efforts to ensure free, fair and inclusive parliamentary polls in Bangladesh.



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Brace for fog chaos at airports on Sunday: IndiGo cancels flights; Air India issues travel advisory


Brace for fog chaos at airports on Sunday: IndiGo cancels flights; Air India issues travel advisory

NEW DELHI: IndiGo has cancelled 13 flights scheduled for Sunday, citing forecasted bad weather across several airports, with two services affected by operational reasons. The cancellations impact routes to and from major cities, including Chandigarh, Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Hyderabad, Amritsar, Bengaluru, Delhi, Gaya, Kolkata, Chennai, Jaipur and Pune.The airlines on Saturday had cancelled 57 flights across their network at several airports, citing weather conditions.IndiGo, which had cancelled thousands of flights earlier this month due to stricter norms on pilots’ duty periods and rest, has continued to cancel some services for more than a week, citing “bad weather” as the reason.Meanwhile, Air India issued a travel advisory citing dense fog and reduced visibility across parts of northern India. The airline said the conditions may disrupt flight schedules on Sunday morning in cities like Chandigarh, Amritsar and Varanasi.“In the event of unexpected delays, diversions, or cancellations, please rest assured that our ground colleagues remain available to assist you.If you are flying with us tomorrow, we recommend checking your flight status here before heading to the airport and allowing extra time for your journey,” the airlines said through a post on X.The aviation regulator DGCA has designated December 10 to February 10 as the official fog window for this winter, requiring airlines to follow special low-visibility operating norms, as cited by PTI. Under the DGCA’s CAT-IIIB guidelines, airlines must roster pilots trained for low-visibility operations and deploy aircraft equipped to operate in such conditions.Category III systems enable aircraft to land in dense fog, with CAT-III A allowing landings at a runway visual range of 200 metres, and CAT-III B permitting operations at under 50 metres.Under its original winter schedule, IndiGo had approval to operate 15,014 domestic flights per week, or about 2,144 flights a day, around six per cent higher than its summer 2025 schedule. However, after widespread disruptions earlier this month, including the cancellation of about 1,600 flights in a single day due to stricter pilot rest norms, the government cut the airline’s domestic capacity by 10 per cent, or 214 flights daily. As a result, IndiGo is currently limited to operating no more than 1,930 domestic flights per day during the winter season.A four-member DGCA panel is probing IndiGo’s recent operational issues and has already questioned the airline’s CEO, Pieter Elbers, and COO, Isidre Porqueras. The panel’s report is expected later this week.The DGCA on Friday evening submitted its report on the circumstances leading to IndiGo’s operational disruptions to the civil aviation ministry, officials said. The report is expected to examine why the airline’s domestic network was severely affected while international operations remained largely unaffected.A ministry spokesperson said the inquiry committee, headed by DGCA Joint Director General Sanjay K. Bramhane, had submitted a confidential report. Aviation minister Ram Mohan Naidu has told Parliament that the government will take “exemplary” action against IndiGo once the probe is concluded.



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Thackeray cousins to address 7-8 joint rallies for civic polls | Mumbai News


Mumbai: The Thackeray cousins, Uddhav and Raj, will address 7 to 8 joint rallies for the Municipal Corporation elections in a blitz campaign from Jan 2 to 13. Sena (UBT) functionaries said at least 3 rallies will be held in Mumbai for the BMC polls in the last phase of the campaign to end the electioneering a high note. One joint rally each in the city, western, and eastern suburbs of Mumbai is planned. Similar joint rallies will be held in Thane, Kalyan Dombivli, Nashik, Navi Mumbai, and other parts of the MMR.Sena (UBT) functionaries said joint rallies will be the highlight of their campaign, and both cousins are expected to strike an emotional chord with voters on the Marathi Manoos issue and attack the BJP and Eknath Shinde-led Sena. The rallies have been planned even as talks to finalise the seat sharing between Sena (UBT) and MNS are still ongoing. The joint rallies will be held after the December 30 deadline for filing nominations and withdrawal of nomination dates.Sena (UBT) functionaries said under the proposed formula, the Sena (UBT) will get 145 to 150 seats, 65 to 70 seats will go to MNS, and 10 to 12 seats to NCP (SP). The Sena (UBT) has left 12 to 15 of its existing seats for the MNS. In most of these 12 seats, their sitting corporators have joined the Shinde-led Sena or BJP.“We have planned the rallies as the main highlight of our campaign. The two cousins will share the stage and address rallies after 20 years. So far, they have addressed meetings and press conferences together, but not political rallies. So this will have a big impact, and it will mobilise our cadre and also help in upping the ante against the Mahayuti,” a Sena (UBT) functionary said.After several rounds of talks, meetings, family gatherings, and cultural exchanges, the Shiv Sena (UBT) and MNS announced a formal alliance for the BMC and other Municipal Corporation polls, including Nashik, on Wednesday. The two Thackeray cousins, Uddhav and Raj, addressed a joint press conference to make the announcement in Worli. Both Uddhav and Raj struck an emotional chord. Uddhav told the Marathi people, “If you get divided or make any mistake now, you will be completely finished.Uddhav said the two of them have come together as their duty towards Maharashtra. Raj said Maharashtra is bigger than any dispute or fight, and that is why they have come together. However, no seat-sharing formula was shared, and Raj said that the list of candidates or seat-sharing formula won’t be declared, and candidates will directly be told to file their nominations.



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Shocking! Dhaka Capitals assistant coach collapses, dies moments before BPL match | Cricket News


Shocking! Dhaka Capitals assistant coach collapses, dies moments before BPL match
Dhaka Capitals assistant coach Mahbub Ali Zaki died on Saturday (IANS)

Mahbub Ali Zaki, assistant coach of the Dhaka Capitals, died on Saturday after collapsing moments before his side’s Bangladesh Premier League fixture against the Rajshahi Warriors at the Sylhet International Cricket Stadium. He was 59.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW! Zaki fell ill during the team warm-up, prompting immediate medical attention from the Dhaka Capitals support staff, who administered CPR before he was taken by ambulance to Al Haramain Hospital. Doctors later confirmed his death. The Bangladesh Cricket Board’s chief physician, Debashish Chowdhury, verified the incident, with team officials stating that Zaki had not complained of any health issues beforehand.

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The tragedy cast a shadow over the matchday, with players from Sylhet Titans, Noakhali Express and Chattogram Royals also rushing to the hospital on hearing the news. Both teams observed a minute’s silence during the innings break in tribute. The BCB, in a post on X, hailed Zaki’s lasting impact on fast bowling in the country, while the Dhaka Capitals expressed their grief and extended condolences to his family. A former fast bowler, Zaki represented Comilla District in the National Cricket Championship and featured for prominent clubs including Abahani and Dhanmondi in the Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League. Following his playing career, he transitioned into coaching and joined the BCB in 2008 as a High Performance coach. He became a respected figure in Bangladesh’s pace-bowling setup, notably assisting Taskin Ahmed during the scrutiny of the pacer’s bowling action at the 2016 T20 World Cup in India.



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Salt Lines: A forgotten 4,000-km ‘living border’ reappears in a Mumbai museum | India News


Salt Lines: A forgotten 4,000-km 'living border' reappears in a Mumbai museum

In the open-air plaza of Mumbai’s oldest museum, a long, zig-zag wall of cloth ripples in the breeze. At first glance, it looks like a giant curtain. Step closer to squint at the crimson prints on it and the cloth becomes a partition: neat plant patterns on one side and chaotic termite marks on the other. Block-printed deliberately with dyes from homegrown shrubs like babool and karonda, this 20-metre-long cotton wall at the Dr Bhau Daji Lad Museum quietly leads visitors back to a little-known 4,000-km hedge that once formed a thorny botanical border across India, buzzing with birds and bees.Part hedge, part fence, the Inland Customs Line — a forgotten boundary created by the British in the 19th century to enforce the Empire’s deadly salt tax— is the centrepiece of ‘Salt Lines’, the first Indian solo exhibition by artist duo Himali Singh Soin and David Soin Tappeser who go by Hylozoic/Desires.Created in collaboration with RMZ Foundation and India Art Fair and supported by Alkazi Foundation, the show revisits the colonial 4,000km long border of which 2,500km constituted a fence of plants also known as ‘The Great Hedge of India’. Stretching from the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal and patrolled by thousands of customs staff, the hedge–described as “utterly impassable to man or beast”–was built by the East India Company and later the British Raj to enforce the salt tax in the mid nineteenth century. “We first stumbled upon the incredible history of the Inland Customs Line when we were doing more general research on… salt,” the artists say. Its scale shocked them: “It seemed improbable to us that such a large botanical infrastructure could have existed for much of the 19th century without everyone knowing about it.”Salt, which had been lightly taxed under earlier Indian rulers and the Mughals, became one of the British Empire’s most lucrative revenue streams after Bengal Presidency governor Robert Clive’s victory at The Battle of Plassey in 1757. Through monopolies and price controls, the East India Company’s officials forced peasants and merchants to buy salt from government depots at inflated rates. Even during the catastrophic Bengal famine of 1770, which killed an estimated ten million people, land revenue and salt taxes were collected in full.Originally consisting of thorny branches and deadwood piled into a crude fence, it was designed to stop smugglers from moving coastal salt into British-controlled territories, where it was heavily taxed. From the 1860s, the British began converting it into a living hedge, planting hardy native shrubs, digging trenches, building embankments, and maintaining a patrol road. Under officials such as AO Hume, entire teams tended the hedge, watering, pruning, and replanting it.Between 1867 and 1870, Hume oversaw a dramatic expansion of the hedge. By 1869 it stretched more than 2,300 miles from the Indus to the Mahanadi, patrolled by nearly 12,000 men. The line snaked through what is now Pakistan, skirted Delhi, passed Agra, Jhansi, Hoshangabad, Khandwa, Chandrapur and Raipur, and terminated in present-day Odisha. Where living shrubs failed due to rocky soil or frost, stone walls were erected instead; elsewhere, dry hedges of dwarf Indian plum had to be rebuilt constantly after damage from insects, fire and storms.At its height, the hedge was said to be up to 12 feet high and 14 feet thick, made of tightly trimmed trees and shrubs of babool, Indian plum, carounda, prickly pear, and thuer, depending on the soil and climate, with a thorny creeper woven throughout. By the 1870s, more than 14,000 men were employed to guard and maintain it, making it one of the largest security operations in the subcontinent. “On no branch of their duties have the whole establishment bestowed anything like so much time, labour, care, and thought, as on the rearing of this barrier…after all it must be remembered that our barrier is to the Line what the Great Wall once was to China: alike its greatest work and its chiefest safeguard,” wrote Hume. The hedge was lost in the archives, say the artists who scoured the National Archives of India, the British Library, the South London Botanical Institute, the Alkazi Collections and more for its history. “We found textual evidence… but no imagery.” To fill the gap, they created speculative visual records such as re-enactments at Sambhar Lake, an important British salt outpost, and AI-generated images, printed using a 19th-century salt process and toned with gold.At the centre of ‘Salt Lines’ is ‘The Hedge of Halomancy’ (2025), a 23-minute film. It follows Mayalee, a courtesan known to history for resisting the British. “She refuses the British administrators… when they attempt to replace her traditional salt stipend with cash payments,” the artists explain. Salt, in the film, becomes material and metaphor. A three-dimensional salt crystal acts as “a magical talisman,” linking Mayalee to Hume and, symbolically, to Gandhi’s march to Dandi. In another room called the ‘Salt Office’, historical salt-tax objects including two photographs of Bombay’s salt satyagraha from the Alkazi Collection sit beside Salt Prints (2024). “Salt is an acid and a base, an amazing symbol of equilibrium,” the artists say. Sound underscores this tension. “The speculative chapters… are underpinned by bansuri and sitar,” says David. The archival sections use “tuba and percussion,” echoing British military bands and their transformation into Indian wedding music.How did the hedge disappear from public imagination? Nature played the first role. “Termites… begin to eat into the hedge,” the artists note. “Winds, rats, tigers stormed through parts of the hedge.” Human anger, it seems, finished the job. “During the 1857 mutiny, people burnt parts of the hedge down in fury.” When the British gained control over salt-producing regions like Sambhar Lake, they found a cheaper way to tax salt at its source. The hedge — expensive and unwieldy — was dismantled on April 1, 1879. Nature reclaimed it. The living shrubs died or were cut; deadwood was carted off by villagers; embankments eroded. Within decades, almost nothing remained. “The natural world’s resistance not only contributed to the fall of the hedge but also to its utter erasure from history,” say the artists.Many historians had never heard of it until British writer Roy Moxham rediscovered it in the 1990s, travelling across India to piece together its remnants for his book ‘The Great Hedge of India’. “People seldom realise how critical salt is to health,” wrote Moxham. “And yet, it seems inconceivable to me how this incredibly painful part of history, the immense abuse people endured at this time, could be so utterly forgotten.When he set out to find the remnants of the Customs Hedge, Moxham had imagined the barrier as a piece of British whimsy constructed to collect a minor tax. Along the way, he realized that the men posted along it, mostly local recruits, worked in isolation for months, patrolling harsh terrain with sticks, whips, and firearms. Those caught bypassing the hedge faced imprisonment. Famine, he discovered, was worsened by the Salt Tax. In 1877–’78, crops failed from poor rains in the North-Western Provinces while grain was exported, causing starvation. Official reports recorded 1.3 million deaths, with most deaths attributed to disease rather than hunger, though salt deficiency increased mortality. “I had assumed it was merely a flamboyant boundary, perhaps fashioned by administrators with fond memories of English hedgerows,” wrote Moxham. “It was a terrible discovery to find that it had been constructed, and ruthlessly policed, so as to totally cut off an affordable supply of an absolute necessity of life,” he concluded. The hedge entered public conversation again in recent years. In 2022, UK-based runner Hannah Cox set out to trace the forgotten border by running 100 marathons in 100 days, following the path of the Great Hedge across the country. Her journey — physically retracing a line most Indians have never seen — sparked renewed interest in how a structure so long, so intrusive, and so central to colonial revenue vanished almost without a trace.It is fitting that the exhibition sits inside the Dr Bhau Daji Lad Museum, Mumbai’s oldest, built by the British in 1857 as the Victoria & Albert Museum, Bombay. For the artists, its vitrines and industrial models echo the themes of extraction in the exhibition while Tasneem Zakaria Mehta, the museum’s managing trustee and director, says ‘Salt Lines’ allows the institution to “engage with the nature of colonial artistic production… including local people who harvested and consumed salt.As visitors leave ‘Salt Lines’, Hylozoic/Desires offer a last thought — a reminder of what the exhibition ultimately attempts: “All we know is that the artist’s work is to research rigorously, and then… enter into the missing gaps of history and the doubt of the future, and imagine how else we can be.”



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Unnao rape case: SC to hear CBI challenge to Sengar’s life-term suspension on Dec 29; what survivor told agency | India News


Unnao rape case: SC to hear CBI challenge to Sengar's life-term suspension on Dec 29; what survivor told agency

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court is set to hear the Central Bureau of Investigation’s (CBI) appeal on Monday (December 29) challenging the Delhi high court‘s decision to suspend the life sentence of expelled BJP leader Kuldeep Singh Sengar in the Unnao rape case.A three-judge vacation bench led by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant will take up the CBI’s plea.

Unnao Rape Convict Kuldeep Sengar’s Bail Triggers Protests In Delhi, Victim’s Mother Demands Hanging

The survivor in the Unnao case has levelled serious allegations against the investigating officer, claiming the IO “colluded with the judge” to ensure that “the other party won.” Her accusations come days after the Delhi high court granted bail to Sengar and suspended his life term.The survivor and her mother met CBI officials on Saturday to submit a formal complaint on the matter.ANI quoted the survivor as saying, “The complaint is that the investigating officer has wronged me. He colluded with the judge to ensure that the other party won, so that the rape victim would lose, her courage would be broken, and she would not be able to pursue the case further.” She added, “Had the CBI stood with my lawyer, we wouldn’t have had to see this day. We would have won, and they would have lost.”Sengar was convicted by a trial court in December 2019 for raping a minor in Unnao in 2017, and was sentenced to life imprisonment along with a Rs 25 lakh fine. He moved the Delhi high court in January 2020 challenging the conviction, and in March 2022 sought a suspension of his sentence. Throughout the legal proceedings, the CBI and the survivor strongly opposed any relief, citing the seriousness of the offence and potential risks to the complainant and witnesses. However, on December 23, the High Court granted Sengar bail with specific conditions.



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Could chewing moringa leaves really boost your health? |


Moringa oleifera has, for centuries, been a humble participant in traditional cuisine in various parts of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. Its leaves, in some parts, have been eaten raw, cooked, or dried in a domestic setting, largely valued for their high nutritional value rather than flavour. In more recent years, moringa has moved into mainstream consciousness due to the rising tide of interest in plant nutrition, functional foods, and novel, ‘sustainable’ sources of key, necessary nutrients. The practice of chewing raw moringa leaves, one of the least processed ways in which moringa can be taken, has recently attracted attention as an original, whole-food source of vitamins and phytochemicals. As diets in more ‘developed’ parts of the world continue to be dominated by processed foods, the idea of traditional practices like this one having health-supportive potential is attracting increasing interest in scientific and prospective nutritional communities.

3 ways moringa leaves can help your health

The act of chewing raw moringa leaves provides the user with an array of nutrients extracted directly from plants, making nutrients accessible through consumption without heat treatment. This form of consumption also closely relates to traditional ways through which moringa has been widely eaten. Studies reveal several overlapping regions in which the consumption may be advantageous.

  • Provides nutritional balance with vitamins, minerals, and amino acids.
  • Supports metabolic health, such as glucose metabolism and lipid metabolism
  • Offered antioxidants as well as anti-inflammatory principles supporting the immune system

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1. Nutritional support and micronutrient availability

Another often-cited attribute of moringa is its sheer nutritional value. This is due to several key nutrients that are found in substantial amounts in moringa leaves, both as a vitamin supplement, including vitamin A-carotene, vitamin C, calcium, potassium, iron, and amino acids. The paper published in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences explains how these nutrients are used as part of a physiological diet. The leaves can be chewed, which allows useful heat-sensitive components to be extracted. The saliva also has enzymes that initiate the breaking down of plant fibres. This may be a valuable source of nutrition for communities that may not have access to a variety of foodstuffs.

  • Vitamin A derivatives aid vision, skin, and immunityfunctions
  • Calcium and potassium are involved in bone function as well as the action of muscles
  • Supports haemoglobin production and oxygen transport
  • Repairs body tissues and regulates various metabolic processes

2. Metabolic balance and blood sugar regulation

The plant has compounds that affect carbohydrate and fat metabolism within the human body. Isothiocyanates and flavonoids from the plant are associated with enhanced insulin sensitivity and reduced glucose uptake. Chewing plant leaves promotes eating slowly, an aspect that may be crucial in preventing high peaks in blood glucose levels after eating. Slowing the intake of biological compounds enables controlling and regulating metabolism within human bodies.

  • Aids in stabilising blood sugar levels post-eating
  • Augments insulin activity at the cellular level
  • Supports healthier lipid metabolism
  • Integrates with diets for the management of metabolic risk factors

3. Antioxidant and immune support

Oxidative stress arises when the level of free radicals overpowers the body’s endogenous antioxidant defences, hence leading to damage of cells. Moringa leaves come with antioxidants like quercetin, chlorogenic acid, and beta-carotene, which have the ability to counteract the effects of free radicals. Together with that, the leaves contain micronutrients that are vital for the Proper functions of the immune cells.

  • Antioxidants offer protection to cells against oxidation
  • Vitamin C and beta-carotene enhance the immune response
  • Anti-inflammatory compounds aid in modulating the activity of an inflammatory response
  • Nutrient synergy enables sustained cell function

How to use moringa leaves safely and effectively

Raw leaves from the Moringa plant can also be eaten in moderation. Chewing on a few leaves that have been washed is not only beneficial but also enables people to enjoy the nutritional values in the plant. It is worth noting that the leaves can have a bitter taste. However, with maturity, the taste improves.

  • Rinse the leaves well to remove any dust residues
  • Gradually begin with a few doses in order to determine tolerance
  • Chew slowly to facilitate the process of digestion and nutrient uptake
  • Taken during meal times and not on an empty stomach

Safety measures related to the use of Moringa leaves

Although it has been observed that the leaves of this plant are quite harmless when consumed in moderate amounts, eating too much could result in some gastrointestinal problems for some people. Some parts of the plant should never be ingested; these include the root and bark of the plant. Those who already have some medical conditions should be careful.

  • Do not eat roots and barks that may be poisonous
  • Consume in moderation to avoid any gastrointestinal side effects
  • Visit a healthcare professional if pregnant or dealing with a chronic disease
  • Do not use Moringa as a replacement for prescribed medical treatment

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Government unveils Rs 44,700 cr shipbuilding push to boost domestic capacity | India News


Government unveils Rs 44,700 cr shipbuilding push to boost domestic capacity

NEW DELHI: The shipping ministry has notified the guidelines for two major shipbuilding initiatives with an outlay of Rs 44,700 crore, aimed at boosting India’s shipbuilding capacity.The two schemes include the Shipbuilding Financial Assistance Scheme (SBFAS), with a corpus of Rs 24,736 crore, and Shipbuilding Development Scheme (SbDS), with an allocation of Rs 19,989 crore. These schemes are expected to provide a strong policy push to revive shipbuilding activity, attract investments and strengthen India’s maritime ecosystem.Under SBFAS, the government will provide financial assistance ranging from 15% to 25% per vessel, depending on the category of ships built. The scheme offers graded incentives for small normal, large normal and specialised vessels, with disbursement linked to clearly defined construction milestones and backed by security instruments. Incentives for series orders have also been included to encourage scale and efficiency.Under Shipbuilding Development Scheme (SbDS), greenfield shipbuilding clusters will receive 100% capital support for common maritime and internal infrastructure through a 50:50 Centre–state special purpose vehicle, while existing shipyards will be eligible for 25% capital assistance for brownfield expansion of critical infrastructure such as dry docks, shiplifts, fabrication facilities and automation systems.“These guidelines create a stable and transparent framework that will revive domestic shipbuilding, boosting forward and backward linkage amping ‘Make in India’ initiative, enable large-scale investment and build world-class capacity, positioning India as a major maritime nation on the path to Viksit Bharat and Aatmanirbhar Bharat,” port and shipping minister Sarbananda Sonowal said on Saturday.A key feature of SBFAS is the proposed National Shipbuilding Mission, which will ensure coordinated planning and execution of shipbuilding initiatives. The scheme also introduces a Shipbreaking Credit Note, under which ship owners scrapping vessels at Indian yards will receive a credit equivalent to 40% of the scrap value, linking ship recycling with new ship construction and promoting a circular economy. Over the next decade, SBFAS is expected to support shipbuilding projects worth about Rs 96,000 crore and generate employment.The SbDS focuses on long-term capacity and capability creation, including establishment of an India Ship Technology Centre to support research, design, innovation and skills development. The scheme also includes a Credit Risk Coverage Framework, offering govt-backed insurance for pre-shipment, post-shipment and vendor-default risks to improve project bankability and financial resilience.



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