logo
CPI (Maoist) central committee member, 2 others gunned down

CPI (Maoist) central committee member, 2 others gunned down

Time of India6 hours ago

Representative Image
VISHAKHAPATNAM/NEW DELHI: Senior Maoist leader Gajarla Ravi alias Uday, member of CPI(Maoist) central committee (CC), was killed by Andhra Pradesh police on Wednesday in an encounter in Alluri Sitarama Raju district of the state.
With his neutralisation, the total strength of the CC has shrunk to 13, including the four remaining politburo members, report Siva G & Bharti Jain.
Two other senior Naxal leaders - state zonal committee member Ravi Venka Chaitanya alias Aruna and area committee member Anju - were also eliminated. Aruna is wife of another slain CC member Ramachandra Reddy Pratap Reddy alias Chalapathi, who was killed by the anti-Naxal forces in Chhattisgarh in Jan.
Gajarla Ravi is the fifth CC member to be neutralised this year. Ravi was killed in an encounter between Maredumilli and Rampachodavaram areas in ASR district. Ravi and Aruna carried rewards of Rs 25 lakh and Rs 20 lakh respectively, and were accused of several killings in AP and Odisha.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police conduct cordon and search operations in Begumpet
Police conduct cordon and search operations in Begumpet

Hans India

time36 minutes ago

  • Hans India

Police conduct cordon and search operations in Begumpet

Hyderabad: A 'Community Connect, Cordon and Search Operation' was conducted across various localities in Begumpet on Tuesday night. During the operation, police seized foreign cigarettes valued at Rs 4 lakh, and approximately 70 vehicles were impounded for either lacking valid documents, displaying no number plates, or being found abandoned. A total of 530 houses were checked during the extensive operation, which involved a police team comprising around 200 members. According to police, the primary objective of the programme was to engage with the local community, understand their concerns, identify social issues, and take decisive action against anti social elements. The initiative also specifically aimed to curb drug related activities, public consumption of alcohol, and other unlawful behaviours. The operation covered key areas, including Sanjeevaiah Park Railway Station, NBT Nagar, Patigadda, and Old Patigadda. Senior police officials, including the DCP, North Zone; ACP, Begumpet; SHO and DI, Sub Inspectors of Begumpet Police Station; and staff drawn from other police stations, participated in the community engagement. They interacted with residents and gathered feedback on local civic issues. S Rashmi Perumal, DCP North Zone, extended her gratitude to the local residents for their cooperation during the operation and appreciated their active participation. The department assured the public that similar programmes would be organised in the future to strengthen police public relations and ensure community safety. The Zone Police appealed to the public to remain vigilant and report any suspicious or criminal activities in their neighbourhood.

50 years on, Emergency victims in Kerala await official recognition
50 years on, Emergency victims in Kerala await official recognition

New Indian Express

time42 minutes ago

  • New Indian Express

50 years on, Emergency victims in Kerala await official recognition

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: A long 50 years after what's termed the dark age of Indian democracy, thousands of Emergency victims in Kerala are yet to be officially recognised. As many as 13 states have accorded them Emergency victims' status, providing them monthly pensions, with Odisha being the latest to announce it this January. Despite Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan himself being a victim, the state government has curiously been unfavourable towards the demand. Ironically, in a first, the CPM plans to observe an anti-Emergency day on June 25 this year on the 50th anniversary of Emergency. Though there are no official data available, it has been estimated that currently around 5,000 people including those arrested or who took part in protests during the 1975 regime, are alive today in Kerala. On its 50th anniversary, the victims continue to knock at the doors of the state government as well as the Centre for acknowledgement of their status. The Emergency Prisoners Coordination Committee had approached both the CM and CPM general secretary M A Baby — another emergency victim — a few weeks ago with their long-standing demand. The government, however, turned down their request, citing a 2019 HC order that had then referred the matter to the Union government. The EPCC had also long wanted the history of Emergency and the resistance it faced, to be made part of school curriculum, with the Emergency torture camp at Sasthamangalam as a memorial. 'Shouldn't the younger generations know that India underwent a dark age for democracy, not long ago? Having resisted it, the Left has an added responsibility to consider these requests. Several other state governments have accorded the victims such a status; why then can't Kerala accord us political prisoner status?' asks P C Unnichekkkan of the EPCC. On the 50th anniversary, the EPCC plans to hold a dharna raising these demands, chips in Dhanuvachapuram Sukumaran of EPCC. It was Punjab's Akali Dal government, which first recognised these prisoners as secondary freedom fighters in 1980 and provided them pension. Later many states followed suit, with the Odisha government being the latest to provide monthly pension of Rs 20,000 to those imprisoned during Emergency.

US Resumes Student Visas. Social Media Vetting Of Applicants Mandatory
US Resumes Student Visas. Social Media Vetting Of Applicants Mandatory

NDTV

timean hour ago

  • NDTV

US Resumes Student Visas. Social Media Vetting Of Applicants Mandatory

United States: Foreigners seeking to study in the United States will be required to make public their social media profiles to allow screening for anti-American content under new State Department guidelines released Wednesday. The State Department had temporarily paused issuing visas for foreign students at the end of May while it came up with the new social media guidance and it will now resume taking appointments. "The enhanced social media vetting will ensure we are properly screening every single person attempting to visit our country," a senior State Department official said. US consular officers will conduct a conduct a "comprehensive and thorough vetting of all student and exchange visitor applicants," the official said. To facilitate the screening, student visa applicants will be asked to adjust the privacy settings on all their social media profiles to "public," the official said. In an executive order on his first day as president, Donald Trump called for increased vetting of persons entering the United States to ensure they "do not bear hostile attitudes toward its citizens, culture, government, institutions, or founding principles." Student visas are one of a series of battles waged over higher education by the Trump administration, which has rescinded thousands of visas and sought to ban Harvard University from accepting international students. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has revoked visas in large part of students who led demonstrations critical of Israel's offensive in Gaza, as he uses an obscure law that allows the removal of people deemed to go against US foreign policy interests. In April, the Department of Homeland Security said the social media of foreign student applicants would be examined for "antisemitic activity" that could result in visa denial. The US government has been vetting the social media of persons seeking to immigrate to the United States or obtain a green card for more than a decade.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store