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Minister Sakina Itoo conducts surprise visit to Pattan Hospital, orders action against absent staff

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Minister Sakina Itoo conducts surprise visit to Pattan Hospital, orders action against absent staff

Pattan, Oct 21: Minister for Education and Health, Sakina Itoo, Tuesday paid a surprise visit to Sub-District Hospital Pattan, accompanied by the MLA Pattan and CMO Baramulla, to review the functioning of the facility.

During the inspection, the Minister found several employees absent from duty and took immediate action, contacting the Director of Health Services for necessary disciplinary measures.

Itoo expressed concern over the shortage of medicines and essential facilities in the hospital and assured that the government will fulfill all requirements soon.

She also directed officials to ensure regular attendance monitoring, improve the availability of medicines and equipment, and enhance the overall patient experience at the hospital.

The Minister emphasized that accountability and efficiency in healthcare services are key to improving patient care across Jammu and Kashmir. (KNC)

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120 anti-terror ops launched daily in Jammu to eliminate foreign terrorists: IGP

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IGP Jammu assesses operational readiness, infra to tackle cybercrime

Jammu, Oct 21: Inspector General of Police, Jammu Zone, Bhim Sen Tuti, on Tuesday said that 120 anti-terror operations are launched in Jammu on a daily basis to eliminate foreign terrorists, which remains a significant challenge.

Speaking to reporters, the IGP said that foreign terrorists operating in the upper reaches have posed a challenge for the past two years, but the counter-terrorism grid in Jammu has been strengthened.

“We are strengthening the border protection grid. Very soon, foreign terrorists hiding in the upper reaches will be neutralised,” the IG said.

He added that every day 120 operations are conducted in the Jammu Zone as part of routine security measures, whether they are speculative or pinpoint operations—(KNO)

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Japan’s parliament elects Sanae Takaichi as nation’s first female prime minister

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Japan's parliament elects Sanae Takaichi as nation's first female prime minister

Tokyo, Oct 21: Japan’s parliament elected ultraconservative Sanae Takaichi as the country’s first female prime minister Tuesday, a day after her struggling party struck a coalition deal with a new partner expected to pull her governing bloc further to the right.

Takaichi replaces Shigeru Ishiba, ending a three-month political vacuum and wrangling since the Liberal Democratic Party’s disastrous election loss in July.

Ishiba, who lasted only one year as prime minister, resigned with his Cabinet earlier in the day, paving the way for his successor.

Takaichi won 237 votes — four more than a majority — compared to 149 won by Yoshikoko Noda, head of the largest opposition party, the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, in the lower house, which elects the prime minister. As the results were announced, Takaichi stood up and bowed deeply.

The LDP’s alliance with the Osaka-based rightwing Japan Innovation Party, or Ishin no Kai, ensured her premiership because the opposition is not united. Takaichi’s untested alliance is still short of a majority in both houses of parliament and will need to court other opposition groups to pass any legislation — a risk that could make her government unstable and short-lived.

“Political stability is essential right now,” Takaichi said at Monday’s signing ceremony with the JIP leader and Osaka Gov. Hirofumi Yoshimura. “Without stability, we cannot push measures for a strong economy or diplomacy.”

The two parties signed a coalition agreement on policies underscoring Takaichi’s hawkish and nationalistic views.

Their last-minute deal came after the Liberal Democrats lost its longtime partner, the Buddhist-backed Komeito, which has a more dovish and centrist stance. The breakup threatened a change of power for the LDP, which has governed Japan almost uninterrupted for decades.

Later in the day, Takaichi, 64, will present a Cabinet with a number of allies of LDP’s most powerful kingmaker, Taro Aso, and others who backed her in the party leadership vote.

JIP will not hold ministerial posts in Takaichi’s Cabinet until his party is confident about its partnership with the LDP, Yoshimura said.

Takaichi is running on deadline, as she prepares for a major policy speech later this week, talks with US President Donald Trump and regional summits. She needs to quickly tackle rising prices and compile economy-boosting measures by late December to address public frustration.

While she is the first woman serving as Japan’s prime minister, she is in no rush to promote gender equality or diversity.

Takaichi is among Japanese politicians who have stonewalled measures for women’s advancement. Takaichi supports the imperial family’s male-only succession and opposes same-sex marriage and allowing separate surnames for married couples.

A protege of assassinated former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Takaichi is expected to emulate his policies including a stronger military and economy, as well as revising Japan’s pacifist constitution. With her potentially weak grip on power, it’s unknown how much Takaichi will be able to achieve.

Also an admirer of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Takaichi was first elected to parliament in 1993 and has served in a number of senior party and government posts, including as ministers of economic security and internal affairs, but her diplomatic background is thin.

When Komeito left the governing coalition, it cited the LDP’s lax response to slush fund scandals that led to their consecutive election defeats.

The centrist party also raised concern about Takaichi’s revisionist view of Japan’s wartime past and her regular prayers at Yasukuni Shrine despite protests from Beijing and Seoul that see the visits as lack of remorse about Japanese aggression, as well as her recent xenophobic remarks.

Takaichi has toned down her hawkish rhetoric. On Friday, she sent a religious ornament instead of going to Yasukuni.

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Farooq Abdullah stands as symbol of Kashmir’s voice: TN CM

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Farooq Abdullah stands as symbol of Kashmir's voice: TN CM

Chennai, Oct 21: Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin on Tuesday said the Jammu and Kashmir National Conference (JKNC) president Farooq Abdullah stands as a symbol of Kashmir’s voice.

The chief minister heaped praise on Abdullah on his birthday.

“Birthday greetings to JKNC President Farooq Abdullah. He stands as a symbol of Kashmir’s voice, fighting against the erosion of its rights and autonomy,” Stalin said.

“Wishing him happiness, good health, and a long life.”, he said in a social media post and shared an image of the leader.

Born on October 21, 1937, Farooq Abdullah was a three-time Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir and former Union Minister of New and Renewable Energy.

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LG Sinha pays tributes to police martyrs on Commemoration Day

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Lieutenant Governor addresses North Zone Regional Conference of Legal Services Authorities at Srinagar

Srinagar, Oct 21: The Lieutenant Governor of Jammu and Kashmir Manoj Sinha paid heartfelt tributes to police personnel on the occasion of Police Commemoration Day.

In a post on X, the LG’s Office, wrote, “On Police Commemoration Day, we bow our heads in homage to the memory of all police martyrs and gratefully remember those brave police personnel who are selflessly serving to ensure the integrity of the nation and the safety of its citizens.”

The message highlighted the unwavering dedication and sacrifices of police forces across Jammu and Kashmir in maintaining peace and upholding the law. (KNC)

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Massive blaze engulfs several houses in Fatekadal Srinagar

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Massive blaze engulfs several houses in Fatekadal Srinagar

Srinagar, Oct 21: A massive fire broke out late Monday night at Narparistan area of Fatekadal in Srinagar, damaging multiple residential structures and prompting a large-scale firefighting operation by the Fire and Emergency Services Department.

Officials said the fire tenders from Babdem and the department headquarters were dispatched to the spot to contain the fire.

Given the intensity of the blaze, additional reinforcement was rushed from multiple fire stations including MR Gunj, Habakadal, Safakadal and Rainawari.

Officials added that at least six residential houses were damaged in the fire incident. They said firefighters engaged in dousing the flames amid narrow lanes and congested structures faced a very tough time.

The evacuation of families and the belongings added to the chaos, they said adding that local people and police also played a key role in dousing the flames.

The fire caused significant property loss while dozens of families lost their shelter. Police have taken cognizance while teams of officials have rushed to the spot to assess the damage caused by the blaze. [KNT]

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Day after Diwali, Delhi gasps for air amid toxic haze

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Day after Diwali, Delhi gasps for air amid toxic haze

New Delhi, Oct 21: Delhi residents woke up on Tuesday to heavy grey haze darkening the city skies, reduced visibility and the air quality in the ‘red zone’ after many celebrated Diwali last night by bursting firecrackers beyond the two-hour limit set by the Supreme Court.

According to a Central Pollution Control Bureau (CPCB) bulletin, Delhi’s Air Quality Index (AQI) was ‘very poor’, with a reading of 352 at 8 am. It was 346 at 5 am, 347 at 6 am and 351 at 7 am.

An AQI between 0 and 50 is ‘good’, 51 and 100 ‘satisfactory’, 101 and 200 ‘moderate’, 201 and 300 ‘poor’, 301 and 400 ‘very poor’, and 401 and 500 ‘severe’.

The CPCB’s SAMEER app, which provides real-time AQI data from monitoring stations, was not updated on Tuesday morning.

The Supreme Court had allowed the use of green firecrackers in Delhi-NCR between 8 pm and 10 pm on Diwali, which was celebrated on Monday. However, many flouted the court directions, with celebrations continuing late into the night.

Delhi’s AQI stood at 349 at 12 am and 348 at 1 am, according to hourly data from the CPCB.

On Monday, 36 of the capital’s 38 monitoring stations recorded pollution levels in the ‘red zone’, indicating ‘very poor’ to ‘severe’ air quality across the city.

Delhi’s 24-hour average AQI on Monday, reported at 4 pm every day, was in the ‘very poor’ category at 345.

The air quality is expected to slip into the ‘severe’ category more widely on Tuesday and Wednesday.

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France’s former president Sarkozy will begin serving a 5-year prison sentence Tuesday

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France's former president Sarkozy will begin serving a 5-year prison sentence Tuesday

Paris, Oct 21: Nicolas Sarkozy will become the first former French president in living memory to be imprisoned when he is expected to begin a five-year sentence on Tuesday in Paris’ La Santé prison.

Convicted of criminal conspiracy in a scheme to finance his 2007 election campaign with funds from Libya, Sarkozy maintains his innocence. Regardless, he will be admitted to serve his time in a prison that has held some of the most high-profile inmates since the 19th century. They include Capt Alfred Dreyfus, wrongly convicted of treason because he was Jewish, and the Venezuelan militant known as Carlos the Jackal, who carried out several attacks on French soil.

Sarkozy told Le Figaro newspaper that he expects to be held in solitary confinement, where he would be kept away from all other prisoners for security reasons. Another possibility is that he is held in the prison’s section for “vulnerable” inmates, colloquially known as the VIP section.

Former La Santé inmates described their experiences and what the former president might expect to face. The prison, which was inaugurated in 1867, has been fully renovated in recent years.

“It’s not Nicolas Sarkozy, president of the Republic, that’s coming … It’s a man and he will live exactly the same thing that everyone does,” Pierre Botton, a former businessman-turned-author who was imprisoned in La Santé’s vulnerable section between 2020 and 2022 for misappropriation of funds from a charitable organisation, told The Associated Press.

In an unprecedented judgment, the Paris judge ruled that Sarkozy would start to serve prison time without waiting for his appeal to be heard, due to “the seriousness of the disruption to public order caused by the offense.”

Sarkozy to hold his head high

The former president has denied any wrongdoing and protested the decision that he should be imprisoned pending appeal.

“I’m not afraid of prison. I’ll hold my head high, including in front of the doors of La Santé,” Sarkozy told La Tribune Dimanche newspaper. “I’ll fight till the end.”

La Tribune Dimanche reports Sarkozy has his prison bag ready with clothes and 10 family photos he is allowed to bring.

Sarkozy also told Le Figaro newspaper he would bring three books — the maximum allowed — including “The Count of Monte Cristo” in two volumes and a biography of Jesus Christ. The hero of “The Count of Monte Cristo,” by French author Alexandre Dumas, escapes from an island prison where he spent 14 years before seeking revenge.

One of Sarkozy’s sons, Louis, called for a rally Tuesday morning in support of his father in the high-end Paris neighbourhood where Sarkozy lives with his wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy. The supermodel-turned-singer has shared photos of Sarkozy’s children and songs in his honour on her social media feeds since his conviction.

Under the ruling, the 70-year-old Sarkozy will only be able to file a request for release to the appeals court once he is behind bars, and judges will then have up to two months to process the request.

9-square-metre cells

The National Financial Prosecutor’s office told Sarkozy the specifics of his detention last Monday, but details have not been made public. Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin confirmed that Sarkozy will enter La Santé on Tuesday and that he will personally visit him to make sure security conditions are met.

In the so-called VIP section, Sarkozy could have his own room in one of 18 identical nine-square-metre cells in a wing separated from other general prison inmates.

Botton, who says he has known Sarkozy for decades, expressed doubt that the former president will be accorded many special privileges in prison. “Even if you are president of the Republic, even if you are a very rich man, you decide nothing.”

Based on his own experience inside La Santé, about which he wrote the book “QB4,” Botton described what Sarkozy might expect. After being processed, convicts are handed personal kit by the guards and then led to their cells.

“They will open the cell, and (Sarkozy) will discover where he will go,” he said. Botton described the cell he lived in La Santé: “A small 70-centimetre (2 feet 4 inches) bed fixed to the floor, a hot plate, a pay refrigerator, a pay TV.”

He said that inmates’ rooms in the VIP section were equipped with fixed landline phones they can use to make calls, which are recorded by prison authorities, but they cannot receive calls on the same line.

The shock of incarceration

Patrick Balkany, a longtime friend of Sarkozy who spent five months in La Santé for tax evasion in 2019-2020, described the first hours of newly admitted inmates.

“They’re going to take his photo, to make him a card because over there we are a number, we are no longer a person with a name,” he told RTL radio.

Then, “if he is considered like any other inmate, he undresses and his clothes are searched to make sure he does not have any prohibited items on him,” Balkany said.

“The hardest part is when you arrive in your cell, it is a shock,” he added.

Botton, also, recalled the shock he experienced when his affluent life crumbled when he was sent to prison the first time. “I went for my first time from my 1,200 square metre mansion to nine square metres,” he said.

From having a private staff of 11 people outside prison, he found himself cleaning a filthy cell when he arrived, he said. “That’s what we call the shock of incarceration.”

“When you are at 7 pm, you are in jail, alone, and you heard that everything is locked, you are alone,” Botton says. “Everything is finished. The game is finished.”

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Battery shop partially damaged in fire at Pulwama

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3 school buildings damaged in mid-night blaze in south Kashmir's Kulgam

Pulwama, Oct 21: A fire broke out early Tuesday morning in a battery shop damaging it partially in Washbugh area of Pulwama, officials said.

An official said the shop, owned by Mohammad Abbas Mir, son of Mohammad Younis, resident of Washbugh, caught fire under mysterious circumstances.

Fire and Emergency Services personnel rushed to the spot immediately and managed to douse the flames, preventing the fire from spreading to nearby structures, official said.

However, the shop suffered partial damage in the incident. The cause of the fire is being ascertained, officials added. (KNC)

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Trump warns Hamas of ‘eradication’ if Gaza truce fails

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As outrage over war in Gaza grows, Europe's relationship with Israel falters

Washington DC, October 21: A day after Israel claimed that Hamas had violated the ceasefire agreement in Gaza, US President Donald Trump on Monday (local time) issued a stark warning to the militant group, saying it would face “eradication” if it violated a truce in the region.

Speaking on the recent developments in the Middle East at the Oval Office, Trump emphasised that the militant group must “be good” and “behave” to avoid severe consequences.

“We have peace in the Middle East for the first time ever. We made a deal with Hamas that, they gonna be very good. They’re going to behave, they’re going to be nice, and if they’re not… we’re going to eradicate them if we have to. They’ll be eradicated — and they know that,” the US President said.

He accused Hamas of past violence and suggested the group no longer enjoys significant external backing, particularly from Iran.

“They went in and killed a lot of people. They’re violent people. Hamas has been very violent. But they don’t have the backing of Iran anymore. They don’t have the backing of really anybody anymore. They have to be good, and if they’re not good, they’ll be eradicated,” Trump added.
The US President also stressed that Washington would not deploy troops for this purpose, stating that there would be ‘no involvement of US forces’.

Trump’s remarks came during his meeting with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at the Oval Office, where both leaders signed a multi-billion dollar agreement on critical minerals and defence cooperation.

Earlier on Sunday, Israel stated that it has announced a “renewed enforcement” of the ceasefire agreement following a series of air strikes in Gaza, launched in retaliation for what it claims to be attacks on its forces by Hamas.

Following this, top White House officials US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem, as reported by the Times of Israel.

Meanwhile, US Vice-President JD Vance and his wife, Usha Vance, are also set to visit the country on Tuesday.

In a post on X on Sunday, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) stated, “In accordance with the directive of the political echelon, and following a series of significant strikes in response to Hamas’ violations, the IDF has begun the renewed enforcement of the ceasefire, in line with the terms of the agreement. The IDF will continue to uphold the ceasefire agreement and will respond firmly to any violation of it.”

The IDF reported that it had carried out air strikes targeting dozens of Hamas-linked sites across Gaza. These included weapons storage facilities, firing positions, terrorist cells, and approximately 6 kilometres of underground tunnels allegedly used for planning attacks against Israel.

The strikes follow an escalation by Hamas militants in the Rafah area of southern Gaza, as claimed by the IDF, where the defence forces claim that an anti-tank missile and gunfire were directed at IDF troops operating to dismantle terror infrastructure, in accordance with the ceasefire terms.

Till Sunday, the Gaza Media Office reported that 97 people have been killed and 230 others injured since the ceasefire came into effect on October 10.

In a statement posted on Telegram, the office accused the Israeli military of carrying out 80 violations since October 10, calling them “blatant and clear breaches” of the ceasefire agreement and international humanitarian law.

According to Al Jazeera, citing hospital sources in Gaza, at least 42 Palestinians were killed by Israeli military fire in multiple areas across the Gaza Strip on Sunday, marking one of the deadliest days since the US-brokered ceasefire took effect.

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