Breaking News
Premature baby goes home after 4 months at KEM Hosp’s NICU | Mumbai News


Mumbai: After spending more than four months in civic-run KEM Hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), one of the lightest prematurely born babies, a girl child, went home on Saturday afternoon.“From just 600gm to going home strong, she is a true fighter,” said KEM Hospital dean Dr Sangeeta Ravat. While NICU interventions cost lakhs of rupees, the child was treated for free.Her 35-year-old mother got into premature labour in the 25th week of her pregnancy, and the girl child was born late last year in KEM Hospital. “The child had several complications, including respiratory distress that needed her to stay on ventilator support for four months,” said NICU head Dr Anitha Haribalakrishna. The child also suffered spontaneous intestinal perforations that had to be surgically fixed, as well as sepsis.India records the highest number of preterm births in the world, accounting for 20% of such births globally every year. It is estimated that 32 lakh premature babies are born in India every year.“In the NICUs of private hospitals, one hears about 400gm babies going home, but this is a proud moment for a public hospital,” said a doctor associated with the child’s care. Last year, a city hospital had treated a 350gm baby born at 24 weeks of pregnancy.Dr Haribalakrishna said that the girl child has recovered well. “She is now 3.5kg and is on breast feeds. Her scans are all normal too,” she added.Meanwhile, KEM Hospital, which has a 45-bedded ICU, will add another 20-bedded NICU right next to the labour ward. “This will make transfer of premature babies to the new NICU very easy,” said Dr Ravat, adding that the inauguration will take place soon.The hospital’s NICU team handled a 550gm baby, who was born prematurely at 25 weeks of pregnancy, during the Covid pandemic. A premature birth means a baby is born before the 37th week of pregnancy (total 40 weeks).



Source link

Bombay high court holds five-year loan bar unjustified after compromise settlement | Mumbai News


Mumbai: The Bombay high court has held that under the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circular, when a compromise settlement is entered with the lending bank and a non-performing account is settled, there is “no justification in continuing with the penalty measures further for a period of five years, unless it is established that the defaulter is guilty of fraud or that he has siphoned off funds”. The HC offered relief to two directors of a mineral trading company, lifting restrictions imposed on them for availing new loans from banks and financial institutions, by directing the removal of their names from a list of wilful defaulters.The degree of a default would vary in every case, the HC said, and held that it would be “unreasonable to treat every such default on par, as once the defaulter paid the compromise amount, his name is allowed to be deleted from the list of wilful defaulters,” Justices Bharati Dangre and R N Laddha observed in a judgment made available on Friday. The HC disposed of, on March 25, a petition filed by Ravi and Nakul Arya, directors of International Mineral Trading Pvt Ltd, who had approached the HC and sought a declaration that continued penal measures under the RBI master circular on wilful defaulters of July 2015, which places a bar on defaulters for five years, are not applicable when there is a successful compromise settlement and consequent withdrawal of the wilful defaulter tag by the lender bank. IMTC had taken a loan of Rs 115 crore in 2008 from Bank of Baroda and an additional Rs 90 crore from Union Bank. In July 2017, the company’s place was confirmed by a review committee of Union Bank on the list of wilful defaulters. But the company in its petition before the HC pointed out that it had reached a successful settlement, based on which Bank of Baroda had dropped it from such a list; hence, it can’t be banned from seeking further loans, argued Arya’s senior counsel Vikram Nankani. The HC agreed with Nankani’s plea of carving a distinction between those who close an NPA via a compromise payment and those who continue with the default. The HC, after also hearing advocates Prasad Shenoy with Parag Sharma for RBI, AR Bamne for Bank of Baroda and Priyam Amin for Union Bank of India, noted that the RBI’s master circular on wilful defaulters is intended to “put in place a system to disseminate credit information pertaining to wilful defaulters for cautioning banks and financial institution so as to insure that further bank finance is not made available to them”.The HC also noted a new 2024 circular by RBI pertinently “diluted the bar imposed” on new additional credit facility to one year after a name is scratched off the wilful defaulters list but maintained a five-year bar for those seeking loans to float new ventures. The RBI in 2024 also introduced a ‘compromise settlement’ clause to enable the bank to remove a borrower’s wilful defaulter tag on payment of such compromise amount. “In the recent circulars of 2024 and 2025, we have found distinction being made, as regards the bar on additional credit facility and fresh credit facility for floating new ventures, the former being not allowed for a period of one year and the latter for a period of five years. However, if for unavoidable circumstances, the borrower is unable to repay the loan, in our opinion, the axe should not fall upon him, debarring him for five years,” the HC held. Ruling in favour of the Aryas, the HC said, “We declare that as far as the case of the petitioner is concerned, in the wake of the compromise entered by International Mineral Trading Private Limited with the Bank, the restriction imposed for availing additional facility from any Bank/FI shall not be invoked against the petitioners in the peculiar circumstances.”



Source link

More LNG supply for urea plants to boost production: Government | India News


More LNG supply for urea plants to boost production: Government

NEW DELHI: Govt has announced to increase gas supply to urea plants to approximately 90% of their average consumption from Monday, a move that will push productivity to ensure enough availability of the most-used soil nutrient during the upcoming Kharif, and subsequent, Rabi crop season.Currently, the supply of LNG to urea plants is around 70-75% of their last six-month’s average consumption. Govt on Saturday said supply will be increased “considering the available inventory and scheduled LNG cargo arrivals”. It added that gas supply to other industrial and commercial sectors, including supplies through city gas distribution (CGD) networks, will be enhanced by a further 10%, effective Monday.“All industrial consumers, including fertiliser plants, have been advised to provide their additional requirement on spot basis so that the same may be arranged by the gas marketing companies,” an official statement said.Earlier this week, the fertiliser ministry had said monthly domestic urea production dropped to 18 lakh tonnes in March from earlier average of 24 lakh tonnes. It had said manufacturing is set to increase with more availability of LNG, including procurement through “spot buying” every fortnight.Meanwhile, on Saturday, the Centre also extended the State Trading Enterprise (STE) status of Indian Potash Limited (IPL) for importing urea on govt accounts until March 31, 2027. This move is aimed at ensuring uninterrupted supply of urea to meet domestic demand amid volatile international markets.



Source link

Thane couple’s MTP struggle at 31 weeks highlights procedural hurdles | Mumbai News


Mumbai: A Thane couple’s “distress” after approaching the Bombay high court to terminate a 31-week pregnancy, when a local medical board refused permission, has highlighted continuing gaps in India’s amended Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) law.Abhaya, 37, and her husband Kiran (both names changed) said their experience at J J Hospital was “humane” compared with their first encounter with a medical board on MTP.Though the MTP Act was amended in 2021 to allow termination beyond 24 weeks, Form A, which grants non-govt hospitals permission, has not been updated. Private hospitals can still apply for licences only for MTP up to 12 weeks or up to 24 weeks.“Even the best-equipped non-govt hospital cannot do MTP beyond 24 weeks as a result. If the woman is insistent on a non-governmental hospital, then she has to move the high court for permission,” said gynaecologist Dr Nikhil Datar, who campaigned to raise the MTP limit from 20 to 24 weeks. He performed Abhaya’s MTP on March 30.Abhaya said she and Kiran decided to have a second child after their daughter turned 8. They had earlier lost their first-born immediately after birth due to meconium poisoning, and Abhaya also had an ectopic pregnancy.In the 30th week of her current pregnancy, her gynaecologist noticed abnormal skeletal development on a routine ultrasound and referred her to Wadia Hospital. Doctors diagnosed the foetus with skeletal dysplasia, a rare disorder affecting cartilage and bone growth. In severe forms, it can cause chest deformities leading to death soon after birth.Abhaya said doctors told her that the child would have brittle bones, suffer repeated fractures and severe pain. “I did not want my child to suffer so much pain,” she told TOI while recuperating after a C-section at Cloudnine Hospital, Malad, on March 30.The couple approached the medical board at Thane Civil Hospital on March 17 seeking permission for MTP. They received its opinion the next day: “…considering the advanced gestational age (31+ weeks) and the absence of lethal anomaly, the medical board is of the opinion that termination of pregnancy is not justified at this stage”.They then consulted Dr Datar and moved the Bombay high court, which directed them to J J Hospital’s medical board in Byculla. By then, it was March 26, and Abhaya was admitted for tests and specialist examination before the board submitted its report to the court the next day.According to Dr Datar, the J J Hospital board found that the foetal abnormality met the legal standard for termination beyond 24 weeks. It approved medical termination with foeticide in utero, and the court then allowed the procedure.The couple said the difference between the two boards was stark. Abhaya said doctors at J J Hospital were sympathetic and non-judgmental, unlike their experience in Thane. Her husband said that if the process was so difficult in Thane, which is so close to Mumbai, conditions in smaller cities could be worse.The case draws attention to two larger issues. The first is interpretation of the amended MTP Act. In 2021, India extended the gestation limit for certain abortions to 24 weeks and allowed termination beyond that in cases of substantial foetal abnormalities after review by a medical board. Dr Datar said the Thane board has not read the appropriate provisions of the MTP law to give such an opinion. He said the law also covers serious abnormalities likely to cause severe disability and suffering.The second issue is administrative. Datar said Form A, the registration form used by non-govt hospitals under the MTP framework, has not been updated since the law was amended.Because of that gap, private hospitals cannot formally obtain approval to carry out such procedures, effectively limiting them to govt hospitals. He raised the issue in several petitions; while the Maharashtra govt has said Form A is part of central law and must be amended by the Union govt, the Centre has maintained that no amendment is necessary. Dr Datar also said Mumbai should have multiple medical boards like Delhi does. Delhi has boards in eight govt hospitals and five private hospitals.



Source link

2,000 Mumbai eateries plan to switch to piped gas to dodge LPG crunch for good | Mumbai News



Mumbai: After weeks of disruption sparked by the West Asia conflict, Mumbai’s hospitality sector is moving towards a more permanent fix to its fuel crisis. Nearly 2,000 hotels and restaurants, largely in south Mumbai, are preparing to switch to piped natural gas, or PNG, in a bid to escape the uncertainty, delays and daily struggle of securing commercial LPG cylinders.The strongest response has come from south Mumbai, where demand is high despite infrastructure challenges. Dense development and underground utility congestion have limited pipeline expansion in several pockets, yet nearly 60% of applicants are from the area. According to hotelier body AHAR, close to 100 restaurateurs are lining up daily to apply.

Watch

Iran War, LPG Crisis Row Expose Congress Rift As Leaders Counter Rahul Gandhi’s Stand Openly

Mahanagar Gas Ltd (MGL) officials said applications are being accepted from hotels and restaurants located near existing pipeline networks. Backed by support from the Centre and the Maharashtra govt, including deemed permissions for pending pipeline-laying proposals, the company has accelerated work on commercial connections. Officials said infrastructure has already been laid in several residential complexes near hospitality hubs, allowing faster extension once approvals are in place. An official said hotels and restaurants can apply either online or by visiting the office.The transition follows one of the toughest supply squeezes the city’s food business has faced in recent years.At the peak of the shortage, commercial LPG deliveries became erratic, forcing eateries to trim menus, reduce operating hours and, in some cases, temporarily shut kitchens. Industry estimates suggest nearly 60% of restaurants either curtailed services or shifted largely to online orders, affecting breakfast counters, tiffin services and affordable meal options relied upon by office-goers and commuters.Many establishments tried to cope through temporary measures such as induction cooking, sharing cylinder stocks and limiting operations to select hours. But these alternatives came with higher electricity costs and practical constraints, especially for kitchens built around high-volume cooking.Now, a special enrollment drive by Mahanagar Gas in partnership with AHAR is speeding up the shift. AHAR president Vijay Shetty said around 800 members have already applied for PNG connections within a week, and the number could rise to 2,000 by the end of the campaign.For restaurants that depend on cylinders every day, PNG offers relief from a major logistical burden.The recent crisis has made one thing clear to the industry: dependence on cylinders leaves businesses exposed to global shocks. Even though LPG supplies have improved marginally, confidence remains fragile. For many restaurateurs, PNG now represents not just convenience, but continuity — a safer, smoother and more dependable energy source for a city that runs on its kitchens.



Source link

Shubman Gill injury update: Rashid Khan sheds light on GT skipper comeback after RR loss | Cricket News


Shubman Gill injury update: Rashid Khan sheds light on GT skipper comeback after RR loss
Shubman Gill (BCCI/IPL Photo)

NEW DELHI: Gujarat Titans suffered a narrow 6-run loss to Rajasthan Royals in a high-scoring IPL clash, but the bigger talking point after the match was the fitness of their regular captain, Shubman Gill. Stand-in skipper Rashid Khan provided some reassurance, saying, “He’s good. Hopefully he’s gonna be alright for the next game. He just had the muscle spasm, so hopefully he’s gonna be alright soon.”Where GT Lost the GameRashid admitted the team started well both with the ball and bat but lost control during a crucial phase. “I felt we have given a great start with the openers. And then I felt in the 12th and 13th overs, we lost back-to-back wickets. That’s something which really put us on the back foot.”

Watch

‘Bowlers have it hard’ – Glenn Phillips breaks down modern T20 cricket

He added that the target was achievable but momentum slipped away. “On the wicket like this, 9-10 per over, it’s not that the hard job to be done… but I think we just lost a few early quick wickets… which just didn’t allow us to go on.”Final Over & FightbackChasing 211, Gujarat needed 11 runs in the last over, but Tushar Deshpande held his nerve brilliantly. Rashid revealed the plan was simple: “Well, the discussion was clear, like, we just need to hit one boundary.” However, he credited the bowler, saying, “I think Tushar bowled really well. He bowled some exceptional yorkers.”Rashid also admitted he missed a key chance: “The one ball which he missed his line and length, I should have hit that for six.”Despite the loss, Rashid remained optimistic about the season ahead. “It’s gonna be a long tournament and we learn from it and we come back stronger.”Overall, while Gujarat fell short in a tight finish, the update on Gill’s injury will be a big relief for the team going forward.



Source link

19-year-old arrested with illegal weapons in Maharashtra | Mumbai News


Thane: Police arrested a 19-year-old youth for allegedly possessing a cache of illegal weapons at his residence in Kalyan. The accused, identified as Yuvesh Sayyad, is said to be working as a mobile repair technician.Acting on a tip-off, a police team conducted a raid in the Ghas Bazar area around 11 pm on March 29. During the search, officials recovered multiple sharp weapons, including large knives, iron knives, and a concealed gupti—a blade typically hidden inside a stick or sheath. Police said a case has been registered, and the accused has been taken into custody. Police are now probing the source of the weapons and whether the accused had any criminal intent or links to unlawful activities.



Source link

Maharashtra: 41 motorcycle thefts solved, 3 arrested, 58 bikes recovered by Thane Crime Branch | Mumbai News


Thane: The Bhiwandi unit of Thane crime branch has arrested three habitual offenders and solved 41 cases of two-wheeler theft across the district. Police recovered 58 stolen motorcycles and scooters collectively valued at Rs 10.6 lakh.The arrests were made recently following specific directives from police commissioner Ashutosh Dumbre to curb rising incidents of vehicle theft in the commissionerate. Acting on a tip-off received by police constable Sabir Sheikh, along with constable Vijay Kumbhar and other Crime Branch officers, a trap was laid to apprehend the accused. The arrested have been identified as Ganesh alias Ganu Raju More (21) from Dombivli, Saheb-ali alias Chotu Sultan-ali Sheikh (19), and Sunil alias Bala Shankar Rathod (20), both residents of Bhiwandi.During interrogation, the trio confessed to multiple thefts across several police station jurisdictions, including Narpoli, Bhiwandi City, Shantinagar, Nizampura, Bazarpeth, Badlapur East, Vartak Nagar, Naupada, and Bhiwandi taluka. Most offences have been registered under relevant provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita. Senior police inspector Shital Raut said the accused primarily targeted two-wheelers parked on roads outside housing societies, especially those without proper locks. Investigators revealed that the gang used a simple yet effective method to steal vehicles. One of the accused, Chotu Sheikh, a mechanic by profession, would start the ignition by directly connecting wires. The stolen vehicles were then tried to be disposed of in different cities without valid documentation, making tracing difficult.Police said further investigation is underway to identify additional buyers and possible accomplices in the racket.The operation was carried out under Raut along with a team of officers, whose coordinated efforts led to the recovery of stolen property and the arrest of the serial offenders.



Source link

Maharashtra: Police seize mephedrone worth Rs 4.1 crore, three arrested | Mumbai News


Thane: The Anti-Narcotics Cell of Thane Crime Branch has busted a high-value narcotics racket, arresting three persons and seizing mephedrone (MD) worth nearly Rs 4.1 crore.The action comes as part of a special drive launched on the directives of the Thane police commissioner Ashutosh Dumbre to crack down on the illegal drug trade in the region. The operation was triggered by specific intelligence received by a constable. Acting swiftly, a team from the Anti-Narcotics Cell verified the input and laid a trap. On March 23, around 7.10 pm, officers intercepted two suspects near the MTNL office in Charai, Thane. The accused, identified as Sohel Dilip Khan (26), a resident of Kopri, and Rohit Vilas Sitapure (21) from Ulhasnagar, were found carrying substantial quantities of Mephedrone. Police recovered 1.56 kg from Khan and 1.6 kg from Sitapure, said DCP Amar Singh Jadhav. Following the arrests, investigators carried out a backward link probe to trace the source and network behind the contraband. This led to the arrest of a third accused, Rajesh Hadawale (23), also from Kopri. According to police, the trio was involved in the illegal possession and intended distribution of a total of 2.6 kg of the synthetic drug, said Jadhav. A case has been registered at Naupada Police Station under relevant sections of the NDPS Act. All three accused have been remanded to police custody, while further investigations are under way to uncover the larger supply chain.



Source link

Man arrested with illegal cough syrup bottles in Maharashtra | Mumbai News


Thane: Thane Crime Branch’s anti-extortion cell arrested a 26-year-old man for allegedly possessing and attempting to sell codeine-based cough syrup illegally in the Rabodi area of Thane (W), officials said.The action was carried out on March 24 following a tip-off received by police personnel, indicating that a suspect would be arriving near a bridge on Saket Road with a stock of prohibited pharmaceutical substances. Acting on the input, a team laid a trap at the spot and apprehended the accused. The accused, identified as Mohammad Sarfaraz Ismail Sayyed, a native of Uttar Pradesh, was found carrying a bag containing 120 bottles of Anrex cough syrup (100 ml), which contains codeine phosphate and triprolidine—substances regulated due to their potential misuse. Police said the accused did not possess any valid licence or documents for storing or selling the medicines. A mobile phone and other materials were also seized, taking the total value of the recovered items to Rs 35,835. A case was registered at Rabodi police station.



Source link