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Rail safety: Spending triples to Rs 1.17 lakh cr in FY26; Kavach expanded, CCTV rollout scaled up


Rail safety: Spending triples to Rs 1.17 lakh cr in FY26; Kavach expanded, CCTV rollout scaled up

Safety expenditure on Indian Railways has nearly tripled over the past decade to Rs 1,17,693 crore in 2025-26 from Rs 39,200 crore in 2013-14, with the national transporter expanding deployment of indigenous train protection system Kavach and rolling out CCTV surveillance across coaches and locomotives, the government said in response to questions in the Rajya Sabha.Safety remains the highest priority for Indian Railways and the stepped-up investments have contributed to a steep decline in accidents over the years, according to information shared in the Rajya Sabha by Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw.

“Reform Express Moving At Speed Under PM Modi” Piyush Goyal On Budget 2026

Trackside implementation of Kavach — an indigenously developed Automatic Train Protection (ATP) system — has been taken up across 23,360 route kilometres, covering the Golden Quadrilateral, Golden Diagonal, High Density Network and other identified sections of the rail network.Kavach assists loco pilots in operating trains within specified speed limits and automatically applies brakes if the driver fails to do so. It also enables safer operations during adverse weather conditions. The system was adopted as the national ATP system in July 2020.After extensive trials, Kavach Version 4.0 has been commissioned across 1,297 route kilometres, including key high-density corridors such as Delhi–Mumbai and Delhi–Howrah. The latest version improves location accuracy, enhances signal information handling in large yards, and enables direct interface with electronic interlocking systems.Indian Railways has also finalised tenders to equip 6,300 electric locomotives with Kavach Version 4.0, while another tender for 2,679 diesel locomotives is under finalisation. More than 48,000 personnel, including about 45,000 loco pilots and assistant loco pilots, have been trained on Kavach technology so far.The cost of providing trackside and station Kavach infrastructure is about Rs 50 lakh per km, while onboard locomotive equipment costs about Rs 80 lakh per loco. Funds utilised on Kavach works till December 2025 stood at Rs 2,573.36 crore, with Rs 1,673.19 crore allocated for 2025-26.Alongside, Indian Railways is expanding onboard surveillance to enhance passenger safety. Around 12,300 coaches — including all operational Vande Bharat and Amrit Bharat train rakes — and 460 locomotives have been equipped with CCTV cameras across the network.The installation of CCTV cameras is aimed at deterring vandalism, theft and other miscreant activities while assisting in incident investigation, with zonal railways and production units undertaking procurement and installation.



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Minor allowed inside poll booth in Maharashtra’s Solapur; SEC suspends polling officer, cop | Mumbai News


Image used for representative purpose only

MUMBAI: The Maharashtra State Election Commission (SEC) has ordered the suspension of a polling officer and a police constable in Solapur after a minor was allowed inside a polling booth along with his father, a candidate in the Zilla Parishad election. The action follows a video that went viral on social media last week, showing a 14-year-old boy accompanying his father and allegedly casting a vote at the Yashwant Nagar polling station in Akluj during the Zilla Parishad and Panchayat Samiti elections held on February 7. In the video, NCP (SP) candidate Arjun Sinh Mohite Patil’s son is seen standing beside him inside the polling compartment and pressing the button on the EVM. In a letter addressed to the Solapur collector on February 10, the SEC said allowing a child inside the polling compartment amounted to a violation of election rules. According to a preliminary inquiry report, the commission found negligence in the discharge of election duties by polling officer Anna Savata Budhe and police constable Gajanan Sitaram Rajut, who were posted at the booth. The SEC has directed the immediate suspension of both officials and initiated departmental disciplinary proceedings against them. It has also instructed the district administration to submit a detailed compliance report at the earliest. The commission further stated that an FIR has been registered in the matter, naming Mohite-Patil, and asked the collector to provide a factual report on the status of the case and subsequent action taken.



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The ‘Zimbabwe Prophecy’: Why history says Suryakumar Yadav’s India will lift the T20 World Cup 2026?



As the dust settles on Zimbabwe‘s monumental 23-run victory over Australia at the R. Premadasa Stadium in T20 World Cup 2026 on Friday, a startling historical coincidence has gripped the cricketing world. While Zimbabwe are celebrating their clinical dismantling of the world’s number two side, Indian fans are pointing toward a ‘history loop’ that has accurately predicted every major Indian World Cup victory for over four decades.

Why history indicates Suryakumar Yadav’s India will win T20 World Cup 2026?

The statistical anomaly began in 1983, when Zimbabwe, playing their first-ever ODI, shocked the mighty Australians at Trent Bridge by 13 runs. Later that same month, India famously defeated the West Indies at Lord’s to claim their first-ever World Cup. This “Prophecy” resurfaced 24 years later during the inaugural T20 World Cup 2007 in South Africa.

In their opening fixture, Zimbabwe chased down Australia’s target with one ball to spare, sparking a tournament that ended with MS Dhoni hoisting the inaugural T20 trophy in Johannesburg. Now, in 2026, the third chapter has been written. Zimbabwe’s defense of 169 in Colombo, led by Blessing Muzarabani’s 4/17, has not only pushed Australia to the brink of elimination but has reignited the legend of the ‘Zimbabwean Jinx.’ As entrepreneur Ramesh Srivats noted on social media, the pattern is undeniable:

“1983 ODI World Cup: Zimbabwe beats Australia. India wins. 2007 World T20: Zimbabwe beats Australia. India wins. 2026 T20 World Cup: Zimbabwe beats Australia. Complete the sentence…”

The fact that Zimbabwe holds a 100% win record against Australia in T20 World Cup history (2 wins in 2 matches) adds a layer of mystical superiority that seems to serve as the ultimate omen for an Indian triumph.

The pattern is as simple as it is eerie: every single time Zimbabwe defeats Australia in a World Cup, India goes on to lift the trophy. This rare feat has only occurred twice before, in 1983 and 2007, leading many to believe that the stars have officially aligned for Suryakumar Yadav to join the elite company of Kapil Dev, MS Dhoni and Rohit Sharma.

Also READ: Mohammad Amir mocks unwell Abhishek Sharma ahead of IND vs PAK T20 World Cup 2026 clash

T20 World Cup 2026: India’s dominance and Australia’s desperation

Beyond the realm of superstition, the on-field reality for the “Men in Blue” is equally formidable. India currently sits comfortably at the top of Group A with two clinical wins over the USA and Namibia, boasting a tournament-high Net Run Rate of +3.050. Under the aggressive leadership of Suryakumar Yadav, the squad has displayed a balanced lethality, with Hardik Pandya firing as a true all-rounder and Varun Chakravarthy spinning webs around opposition batters.

Meanwhile, the Zimbabwe-Australia result has turned Group B into a graveyard for favorites. Australia, missing the likes of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood for the first time in 15 years, now faces a ‘virtual knockout’ against co-hosts Sri Lanka on February 16. While Pakistan fans hope to break the loop at the R. Premadasa this Sunday, the momentum is firmly with the defending champions. For India, the path to the March 8 Final in Ahmedabad is no longer just about their formidable 15-man squad; they are now backed by a 43-year-old historical ‘prophecy’ that has never been wrong.

India’s Performance in World Cups

Year The Catalyst (ZIM vs AUS) India’s Captain India’s Final Result
1983 Zimbabwe won by 13 runs Kapil Dev Champions
2007 Zimbabwe won by 5 wickets MS Dhoni Champions
2026 Zimbabwe won by 23 runs Suryakumar Yadav TBD (March 8)

Also READ: T20 World Cup 2026: Sunil Gavaskar highlights technical flaw in Sanju Samson’s batting ahead of Pakistan showdown





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Mumbai Metro Pillar Collapse: Portion of under-construction Mumbai Metro pillar collapses in Mulund; 1 dead, 4 injured | Mumbai News


MUMBAI: One person was killed and three others were injured after a portion of a parapet segment from the under-construction Metro Line-4 viaduct collapsed onto an autorickshaw and a car on LBS Road near the Johnson & Johnson Company in Mulund (West) at around 12.20 pm on Saturday.According to the Mumbai Fire Brigade, a concrete piece measuring approximately 6 ft by 4 ft fell onto a moving autorickshaw and a Skoda car.The injured were rushed to Upasana Multispeciality Hospital, where Ramdhan Yadav was declared brought dead. Rajkumar Indrajeet Yadav (45) is in critical condition in the ICU, while Mahendra Pratap Yadav (52) and Deepa Ruhiya (40) are stable.

Image Credit: TOI

Fire brigade personnel, police teams, metro staff, ward officials and 108 ambulance service personnel rushed to the spot and launched rescue operations. Authorities cordoned off the area, and traffic movement on the busy LBS Road stretch was affected for some time.Fire brigade teams, police personnel, metro staff and civic officials carried out rescue operations, and the area was cordoned off, briefly affecting traffic on the busy arterial road.Mulund MLA Mihir Kotecha demanded an inquiry and action against the contractor as well as the officials concerned. Mayor Ritu Tawde said the parapet segment had been installed only a day earlier and that the stretch should have been barricaded, indicating possible negligence.

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Image Credit: TOI/ Sanjay Hadkar

Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Aditya Thackeray criticised the government over alleged safety lapses at infrastructure sites and questioned whether the contractor would be blacklisted.The work falls under Package CA-10 and is being executed by contractor M/s Rajv-Milan, with project management consultancy by the DB-Hill-LBG consortium. Officials said a detailed probe has been initiated to ascertain the cause of the collapse.Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis ordered a probe into the pillar collapse incident and also announced an ex gratia of Rs 5 lakh for the family of the deceased.



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Noida metro expansion: Cabinet okays Aqua Line extension to Sector 142, 8 new stations to come up


Noida metro expansion: Cabinet okays Aqua Line extension to Sector 142, 8 new stations to come up

The Union Cabinet has approved the extension of the Noida Metro Aqua Line from Botanical Garden to Noida Sector 142, a move aimed at strengthening urban connectivity in one of the fastest-growing manufacturing and services hubs in the National Capital Region.The project will be implemented by the Noida Metro Rail Corporation Limited (NMRC) and will add 11.6 km of metro network with eight new elevated stations, cabinet minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said.The total project cost has been pegged at Rs 2,254 crore, with an estimated implementation timeline of four years.Botanical Garden will serve as a key interchange station, linking the Noida Metro Aqua Line with the Delhi Metro’s Magenta Line and Blue Line, improving multi-modal connectivity for commuters travelling between Delhi, Noida and Greater Noida.Once completed, the total metro network across Noida and Greater Noida is expected to cross 61 km, significantly enhancing last-mile connectivity and supporting urban and industrial expansion in the region.



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‘Don’t think Abhishek Sharma is technically sound’: Mohammad Amir makes controversial remark ahead of IND vs PAK clash | Cricket News


'Don’t think Abhishek Sharma is technically sound': Mohammad Amir makes controversial remark ahead of IND vs PAK clash
Mohammad Amir makes controversial remark about Abhishek Sharma (Agency Photos)

NEW DELHI: Former Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Amir has stirred controversy ahead of the India vs Pakistan T20 World Cup 2026 clash by criticising Indian batter Abhishek Sharma, who is currently recovering from illness. With the big match set for February 15 in Colombo, the comments have added extra spice to the rivalry.

What will be India’s playing XI against Pakistan?

Amir questioned Abhishek’s batting ability and called him a one-dimensional player.“By whatever little I have seen, if you ask me honestly, I feel he is just a slogger… I don’t think he is technically sound,” Amir was quoted as saying in a Pakistani show. “He just stands there and wants all balls to be bowled in a particular area. I will consider him a proper batter only when I see that the ball is swinging even slightly and he tackles it well.” Amir also suggested that Pakistani bowlers should target Abhishek with bodyline bowling and slower balls, claiming he lacks patience and technique.Meanwhile, Abhishek has been racing against time to recover from a serious stomach infection that led to weight loss and hospitalisation.Recently, Varun Chakravarthy offered a more positive update, saying, “As far as I have spoken to him he looks good, he did some practice today also. He told me he is on the way.”Abhishek has travelled with the team to Colombo and will undergo final fitness tests. India have made a perfect start to their campaign, having already won both their matches against USA and Namibia, respectively. If they win the game against Pakistan on Sunday, the Men in Blue will qualify for the Super 8s.



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Keeping the roots alive: Stars of this year’s blues fest on how the music ages & adapts | Mumbai News


From seasoned players to young revivalists, artists at this year’s blues fest explain why the genre remains restless, relevant and rooted in lived experience‘Blues crossing into the cinematic world, is a whole other level’: Eric GalesEric Gales landed in Mumbai with a Grammy glow and a stiff neck. Just hours before boarding his flight from North Carolina, the blues guitarist slipped on ice outside his home. “I landed on my neck and back,” he says matter-of-factly. A hospital visit later, he shrugs it off. “I’m very sore, but I’ll be okay.”That grit feels fitting. Gales’ career has never been about smooth edges. An energy that also explains his nickname Raw Dawg, which he says is about being “plain, unfiltered… my guitar style, my personality are raw.” The name stuck through blues stages and even his rapping detour with hip-hop group Three 6 Mafia.This year, though, that rawness has travelled somewhere new. Into cinema. His guitar work on Sinners soundtrack ‘Elijah’, composed by Ludwig Goransson, has just earned him two Grammy Awards and an Oscar nomination, a moment he’s still absorbing. “When it crosses into the cinematic world and has the kind of success this film is having, it’s a whole other level.” After years of work, the recognition he says, feels earned. “I’m not completely surprised… but full of joy and gratitude.”Goransson, already a fan of Gales’, initially wanted him to appear in the film, but a tour with Joe Bonamassa made that impossible. Instead, he was brought in to play for the score. “He asked me to play what I felt, just be myself in each scene,” Gales recalls. The scale of it only hit him at the New York premiere. “Within the first five minutes I heard my guitar… About 97% of what I played made it into the film. It was a beautiful thing.That ease comes from a lifetime of trusting instinct, including his famously upside-down guitar technique. “I just picked it up from my brother and that’s how I play,” says Gales. He didn’t even realise it wasn’t standard untilyears later. “And I didn’t want to change it.”The Mahindra Blues Fest (MBF), where Gales is performing for the third time on Sunday, has stayed with him. The energy always does. So does something harder. “It hurts to see the poverty,” he admits. There are lighter memories too. Arriving once with his wife and ZZ Top without luggage, dressed instead in traditional white outfits. “Like kings and queens,” he laughs. “But the way people treat you here, the traditions… it’s special.‘Young people still rush to the stage’: DK HarrellDK Harrell laughs when the conversation turns to his name — Irish, as it turns out — and unexpectedly loaded. “D’Kieran Rion Harrell,” he says, explaining its meaning: “little dark prince”. In Hebrew, the name translates to “on top of the mountain of God”. He suspects his mother sensed something. “That her son was going to do something unique.” His own reading is less mystical. “The worst storms start at the top of a mountain. So I have the best seat in the house when things go wrong!” At 27, the blues singer and guitarist, carries a layered lineage that traces back to French settlers in Louisiana and enslaved ancestors. “I’m Black, I’m Creole, I’m a little everything,” he says. That complicated history, he believes, even shows up physically. He links his vitiligo to the genetic consequences of incest within his family tree, a reality many Creole families were forced into. “I used to be scared of it,” he admits. “Now I like it because being different is beautiful.”The blues, for Harrell, arrived before the alphabet. “I was two when my mother played B B King’s Deuces Wild in the car,” he says. “She heard a little voice singing The Thrill Is Gone. That’s actually how I started talking.”One of the most formidable young stars of the current blues resurgence, Harrell is aware of the contradiction of being a young man playing avintage genre. “We actually have more young people in Europe show up than in the US,” he says. Sometimes the divide collapses. At a Florida festival, he recalls launching into Etta James staple I Just Want to Make Love to You when “a big group of young ladies in their twenties just rushed the stage”, startling an audience otherwise filled with people in their sixties.His solution is straightforward. “I make the music sound old school… but my lyrics are contemporary,” he says. So instead of Cadillacs and automobiles, his blues talks about FaceTime or loving more than one person “because that’s the way young people are”.To keep the genre alive, he argues, the blues simply needs to be put back in the room. “With collaborations. HaveBeyonce do a song with Shemekia Copeland and Eric Gales with Drake. If it wasn’t for the blues, they wouldn’t have this music.” And Harrell, standing at the edge of the mountain, sounds ready to keep calling out the forecast.‘All of a sudden, at 64, my passport is full’: Jeff TaylorIt’s hard to picture Jeff Taylor as a former high school principal, and yet, for years, the frontman of the Altered Five Blues Band walked the tightrope between school and stage before he finally gave himself over, six years ago, body and soul to the blues. “I told the band right in the beginning, ‘school has to come first. I can’t miss the prom; I can’t miss the school dances.’ So, I would go to the school dance and then drive downtown and play music.The city will sample it today as the Altered Five Blues Band—the quintet from Milwaukee—debuts at the blues festival with a lineup of the old, the new, and the spanking new. “We’ll be playing a couple of songs from our latest album Hammer & Chisel. With the last few albums, we’d try to play songs live for at least six months to get an audience reaction before we recorded them. With this one, we didn’t.”The band’s guitarist Jeff Schroedl is their principal songwriter, but everybody pitches in with stories. One of them was about the time Taylor almost drowned. “I was around 11 when my brother and I were playing on the frozen river in Wisconsin, and I fell through the ice. But I wasn’t thinking about dying. I was thinking about how madmy mother was gonna be,” he laughs, “I’m still afraid of water. That’s what our new song ‘I Can’t Shake it’ is about.The band has bagged several awards including three Blues Music Award nominations; scaled the Billboards and topped iTunes and Amazon Blues Charts.“I was in the school cafeteria when the sixth graders came in for lunch and got a call: ‘Can you come to the phone? It’s Jeff.’” He was calling to say their album Charmed & Dangerous had hit number 13 on iTunes. Another call as the seventh graders arrived, it was up to number eight. By the time the eighth graders settled in, the song had climbed to number three. “The students were screaming and calling their parents to say, ‘Mr Taylor is on iTunes’... I had never reallybeen anywhere until I was 50, and now, all of a sudden, at 64, my passport is full.”‘As a white English guy, I followed the blues back to where it came from’: Matt SchofieldFrom a young age, Matt Schofield was taught to follow the thread to the heart of the music. “My father would say, ‘If you like Stevie Ray, you gotta listen to Albert King. Because that was his influence’. It seemed important for me to follow the tradition of electric blues guitar all the way back to the beginning,” says the three-time British Blues Guitarist of the Year. “Going back gives you a pretty good depth of understanding that you can apply to your own music.Growing up in Cotswold, Schoefield cut his teeth on cassettes taped off his dad’s vinyl. “There was no one to teach me, so I learned from listening to records. I just had three songs of B B King that I’d listen to over and over.”His father moved to the US when he was a boy. Decades later, Schofield followed for the music. “I moved to be able to work there more easily, but also, to be around where the music came from. . . In fact, my next move is to New Orleans to really get to the heart of it. I guess it’s my own search for authenticity, as a white English guy. I want to be as deeply in it as I can be,” he grins.Incidentally, it was the Mahindra Blues Fest — and not New Orleans — that gave him this opportunity. “I got to play with Buddy Guy for the first time,” he says, of the inaugural edition of the festival, in 2011. “It was one of the highlights of my life. I grew up with his music, and to finally get to jam with him—in India, of all places! I thought it would be in a club in Chicago.”While Schofield has been tracing his way back to the roots of the blues, he credits its branches—British blues, in particular—with spreading the word. “It’s actually a very important part of the blues history,” he says, “because British blues artists in the 60s and the early rock androll bands — The Rolling Stones, John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton — introduced white America to the blues. Until then, it was segregated, race music.‘If the world ended, my record would tell you what was happening’: Shemekia CopelandShemekia Copeland reads her audience before she sings. “I feel them out. I never make a set list and even if I do, I don’t follow it, because I like to go with the feel of the audience.” Having performed here twice before, she already knows the city’s pulse. “When I first got here, I was shocked to see so many Indians interested in blues.”She was eight when she first performed with her father Johnny Copeland at New York’s Cotton Club, and 18 when she cut her debut CD Turn The Heat Up. She has been called “the greatest female blues vocalist working today” by Chicago Tribune, has eight Grammy nominations, and won multiple Blues Music and Living Blues Awards, and she brings the sum of that legacy to the stage today.“I always say, I’m making little time pieces of art. So, if the world ended and someone found my record, they would know what was happening at that time,” says the singer, whose songs are both memorials and manifestos. She has sung about women’s reproductive rights, racial history, civil rights and domestic violence.Her 2024 album Blame It on Eve, which earned three Grammy nominations, was written at a time when women’s rights, particularly reproductive autonomy, were under scrutiny in the US. As political upheaval intensifies back home, and human rights face new challenges globally, Copeland sees the blues as a natural language for the moment. “I’m not a preachy person; I like to just talk about what’s happening.”Copeland made a critically acclaimed album in 2018 called America’s Child. “It had a song called Ain’t Got Time for Hate. That’s how I’m feeling again now. We’ve stopped loving each other, and instead of seeing how we’re all the same, everybody is focused on what’s different. In America, we’re divided by race and in India, you’re divided by religion. We shouldn’t let these divide us. We should embrace each other for who we are. That’ll be the focus of my next record.”



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New pills offer hope against gonorrhoea as drug resistance tightens grip | India News


New pills offer hope against gonorrhoea as drug resistance tightens grip

NEW DELHI: After decades of losing ground to drug resistance, doctors finally have new weapons against gonorrhoea, a common sexually transmitted infection that has steadily outsmarted one antibiotic after another. The recent approval of two new oral medicines by the US Food and Drug Administration has reopened a narrowing treatment window for a disease edging dangerously close to becoming untreatable.The FDA cleared zoliflodacin (Nuzolvence) and gepotidacin (Blujepa) in December 2025 for treating uncomplicated gonorrhoea. Their arrival comes at a critical time, especially for countries like India, where ceftriaxone is the only effective antibiotic left in routine use.“Gonorrhoea is a major STD and resistance is rising fast,” said Dr Kabir Sardana, head of dermatology at Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital. He attributed the trend largely to antibiotic misuse by general practitioners and quacks. “Azithromycin, once a first-line drug, is now largely ineffective because it was prescribed indiscriminately for everything from minor infections to acne,” he said.Experts say the urgency is reflected in global surveillance. Dr Neirita Hazarika, professor and head of dermatology at AIIMS Guwahati, pointed out that the WHO’s 2025 Global Antibiotic Resistance Surveillance Report has classified drug-resistant gonorrhoea as a high-priority pathogen. She said the approval of the two new oral drugs marks a significant milestone, as clinical trials have shown cure rates comparable to current standard therapy. “These drugs expand treatment options for uncomplicated gonorrhoea at a time when resistance to cephalosporins (Ceftriaxone) and macrolides (Azithromycin) is rising,” she said.Ceftriaxone, now the last dependable option in India, is itself under pressure. Widely used for several other infections, it faces a real risk of resistance if misuse continues. “If ceftriaxone fails, we will be left with virtually no antibiotics for gonorrhoea,” Dr Sardana warned.Gonorrhoea affects both men and women and commonly causes urethritis, but untreated infection can lead to infertility, pelvic inflammatory disease and increased HIV risk. With India already carrying a high burden of sexually transmitted infections, doctors warn that failure of existing drugs would have serious public health consequences.The infection has a long history of defeating antibiotics. Sulfa drugs, penicillin, tetracycline, quinolones and cefixime were all abandoned over time as resistance emerged. By 2007, quinolones were dropped entirely due to widespread failure.Experts say the new drugs are promising but require careful use. Prof Seema Sood of AIIMS New Delhi said zoliflodacin and gepotidacin have shown strong activity in studies for uncomplicated urogenital infection.India’s wider antimicrobial resistance crisis adds urgency. ICMR surveillance has flagged rising resistance linked to over-the-counter antibiotic use. Prof Bimal Kumar Das, HOD of microbiology at AIIMS New Delhi, said newer antibiotics are crucial to tackle AMR, while Dr Hitender Gautam noted that early access in India could help curb resistant infections, with gepotidacin showing potential beyond gonorrhoea.



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‘$100,000 deal’: What US justice department reveals about Pannun murder plot


'$100,000 deal': What US justice department reveals about Pannun murder plot

An Indian national has pleaded guilty in a US court to plotting the assassination of a Khalistani terrorist and US citizen Gurpatwant Singh Pannun in New York in a $100,000 murder-for-hire scheme that US prosecutors say was directed by an Indian government employee.The US Department of Justice said Nikhil Gupta, 54, pleaded guilty before US Magistrate Judge Sarah Netburn to murder-for-hire, conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire and conspiracy to commit money laundering. He is scheduled to be sentenced on May 29, 2026, before US District Judge Victor Marrero.

‘DON’T MESS WITH AMERICA’: Shock U.S. Warning After Indian Man Nikhil Pleads Guilty In Pannun Case

According to the Justice Department, the plot targeted Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a US citizen of Indian origin and leader of a US-based Sikh separatist organization advocating for the creation of Khalistan.“Nikhil Gupta plotted to assassinate a US citizen in New York City,” said US Attorney Jay Clayton. “He thought that from outside this country he could kill someone in it without consequence, simply for exercising their American right to free speech. But he was wrong, and he will face justice. Our message to all nefarious foreign actors should be clear: steer clear of the United States and our people.”

How the $100,000 murder plot was set up

According to the Second Superseding Indictment and statements made in court, Gupta worked with others in India and elsewhere, including co-defendant Vikash Yadav, who US authorities identified as an Indian government employee.Yadav was employed by the Government of India’s Cabinet Secretariat, which houses India’s foreign intelligence service, the Research and Analysis Wing.“In or about May 2023, YADAV recruited GUPTA to orchestrate the assassination of the Victim in the United States,” the Justice Department said.At Yadav’s direction, Gupta contacted an individual he believed to be a criminal associate. That individual was in fact a confidential source working with the Drug Enforcement Administration.The confidential source introduced Gupta to a purported hitman who was actually a DEA undercover officer.“YADAV subsequently agreed, in dealings brokered by GUPTA, to pay the UC $100,000 to murder the Victim,” the release said. “On or about June 9, 2023, YADAV and GUPTA arranged for an associate to deliver $15,000 in cash to the UC as an advance payment for the murder.”

Surveillance, instructions and timing

Prosecutors said Yadav provided Gupta with the victim’s home address in New York City, phone numbers and details about his day-to-day conduct. Gupta allegedly passed that information to the undercover officer and provided Yadav with regular updates, including surveillance photographs.Gupta directed that the murder be carried out quickly but instructed that it should not occur around the time of the Indian Prime Minister’s official state visit to the United States in June 2023.On June 18, 2023, Hardeep Singh Nijjar was shot dead in British Columbia. The Justice Department said Nijjar was an associate of the intended victim and a leader in the Sikh separatist movement.“On or about June 19, 2023, the day after the Nijjar murder, GUPTA told the UC that Nijjar ‘was also the target’ and ‘we have so many targets.’ GUPTA also added that, in light of Nijjar’s murder, there was ‘now no need to wait’ on killing the Victim,” the release said.Gupta was arrested in the Czech Republic on June 30, 2023, and later extradited to the United States.

Charges and potential sentence

Gupta pleaded guilty to murder-for-hire, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years, and conspiracy to commit money laundering, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years.“The maximum potential sentences in this case are prescribed by Congress and provided here for informational purposes only, as the sentencing of the defendant will be determined by a judge,” the Justice Department said.

US agencies react

FBI Assistant Director Roman Rozhavsky said, “Nikhil Gupta was a key participant in a murder-for-hire plot against a US citizen, a murder that was prevented thanks to the actions of US law enforcement. The US citizen became a target of transnational repression solely for exercising their freedom of speech. The message from the FBI should be clear—no matter where you are located if you try to harm our citizens we will not stop until you are brought to justice.DEA Administrator Terrance Cole said, “It is often a slippery and dangerous slope from drug trafficking to deadly violence, as demonstrated by the murder-for-hire plot orchestrated by international narcotics and weapons trafficker Nikhil Gupta. This case is a stark reminder of the ruthless lengths criminals will go to in order to further their illegal enterprises. I commend the men and women of DEA’s New York Task Force Division for their outstanding investigative work successfully foiling Gupta’s assassination plot. Let there be no doubt: DEA remains steadfast in its mission to protect America. We will continue to leverage our superior investigative expertise and unmatched intelligence capabilities to dismantle the drug trafficking networks that threaten our safety and well-being of our communities.”FBI Assistant Director in Charge James C. Barnacle, Jr. said, “At the direction and coordination of an Indian government employee, Nikhil Gupta plotted to assassinate a United States citizen on American soil, facilitating a foreign adversary’s unlawful effort to silence a vocal critic of the Indian government. The FBI will continue to aggressively defend the homeland against any foreign adversaries who target our citizens for exercising their constitutionally protected rights.The case is being handled by the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, along with the FBI and DEA. Gupta remains in custody and will be sentenced later this year.



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Valentine’s Day boom brings cheers for Q-comm brands: More shopping for jewellery, greeting cards, and plush toys


Valentine's Day boom brings cheers for Q-comm brands: More shopping for jewellery, greeting cards, and plush toys

Valentine’s day is here and people are rushing to shower their loved ones with gifts. February 14 is emerging as a big sales opportunity for quick commerce firms and digital-first brands, as people are shopping for fashion, jewellery, beauty, personal care and sexual wellness products. To tap into the momentum, platforms such as Zepto, Blinkit and Instamart began activating special features on their apps from February 7. These include themed storefronts and interactive layouts built around gifting needs for the season. Zepto marked the start of the period with an on-ground event titled ‘Valentine’s Prom Night’. “We have seen a massive surge in Valentine’s gifting this year, with key categories like jewellery, greeting cards, and plush toys growing up to 10X year-on-year,” a spokesperson for Instamart told ET. “Notably, the sexual wellness category has more than tripled.” Competition to attract younger consumers is intensifying. Flipkart Minutes has introduced a dedicated section called RelationShop on its platform. “We have recorded 8X year-over-year growth (February 7-11, 2025 vs. February 7-11, 2026) and anticipate a 7X surge in overall demand this year,” Flipkart spokesperson told ET. At the same time, D2C brands supplying through these channels are also reporting strong traction. MyMuse, which sells sexual wellness products, is seeing sales climb 50–60% year-on-year across quick commerce marketplaces. “This is our third Valentine’s Day on quick commerce and each year the demand is increasing,” said Sahil Gupta, cofounder of MyMuse. “The number of brand searches on platforms have significantly increased as well.” Experts say speed and privacy are central to the appeal for many buyers. Rajat Jadhav, cofounder and chief executive of men’s sexual health and wellness brand Bold Care, linked the seasonal bump to changing conversations around intimacy. “Valentine’s is significant as it changes the mood around intimacy,” he said, adding, “It is one of the few times in the year when people talk about it openly, without overthinking or hesitation. We see that convert into higher curiosity and a lot of first-time buyers.” While February 13 and 14 remain the busiest days because of last-minute shopping, companies note that spending is now distributed across the broader Valentine’s week. “We usually see a 4X spike in revenue, which is from January 15 to February 14, so those 30 days is what we capture,” said said Twishaa Gupta, cofounder of fashion and accessories brand Salty. “This year, targets are super high and we want to close somewhere around Rs 20 crore for just this month. Data from Unicommerce also highlights the scale of the build-up, with the firm registering a 48% year-on-year jump in quick commerce orders between February 1 and 10. For the occasion, platforms have assembled curated lists linked to days such as Rose Day, Chocolate Day, Promise Day and Hug Day. “Carts are bigger, more premium, and the celebration now spans an entire week, signalling a clear move from impulse buys to planned, thoughtful gifting,” the spokesperson from Instamart said, adding that the company increased inventory across dark stores in advance and expanded staffing and delivery partners to handle volumes.



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