logo
'Shopkeepers to be taken into confidence': Odisha plans to ban liquor, non-veg food near Jagannath temple

'Shopkeepers to be taken into confidence': Odisha plans to ban liquor, non-veg food near Jagannath temple

Time of India3 hours ago

BHUBANESWAR: To preserve the sanctity of Jagannath Temple in Puri, state govt intends to ban sale of alcohol and non-vegetarian food in the shrine's vicinity.
Law minister Prithiviraj Harichandan said alcohol sales will be prohibited within a 2-km radius of the 12th century shrine, while non-vegetarian food establishments along the 3-km Grand Road, facing the temple, will be required to cease operations.
'Puri is one of the four sacred dhams in the country. We want to develop Puri into a pilgrim city. Liquor shops and bars will not be allowed to operate within 2-km radius of the temple. The Bada Danda (Grand Road) will be free from non-vegetarian food shops. Our objective is to maintain the spiritual atmosphere around the Jagannath Temple,' said Harichandan. The minister said modalities for the decision's smooth implementation will be finalised soon.
The proposed regulation, if implemented, will affect two liquor shops and two bars within the 2-km radius of the temple, requiring relocation.
Besides, over 70 non-vegetarian food vendors and restaurants along Grand Road between Jagannath and Gundicha temples will need to be relocated.
"The new regulations will be implemented in phases to ensure smooth transition for all stakeholders. The shopkeepers will be taken into confidence before finalisation of the decision," a senior govt official said.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
This Device Made My Power Bill Drop Overnight
elecTrick - Save upto 80% on Power Bill
Pre-Order
Undo
The announcement has received mixed reactions from different sections of society. Debasis Das, secretary of Srikhetra Swabhiman Mancha, endorsed the decision. "This is a long-awaited move that will help preserve the spiritual sanctity of the temple surroundings. The presence of alcohol and non-vegetarian food establishments near the temple has been a concern for many devotees," he said.
Binayak Dasmohapatra, a senior servitor of Jagannath Temple, urged for implementation of the decision. Chhatisa Nijog, representing various servitors' associations of the temple, recently highlighted concerns about intoxicated visitors at the shrine.
Local entrepreneurs have voiced concerns. Suresh Kumar Patra, who manages a bar and restaurant, opposed the decision.

Hashtags

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

WWDC 2025: Indian iOS developers eye updates on AI
WWDC 2025: Indian iOS developers eye updates on AI

Time of India

time12 minutes ago

  • Time of India

WWDC 2025: Indian iOS developers eye updates on AI

As Apple's flagship Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2025 begins on Monday, iOS developers in India said they are looking forward to updates that enhance productivity and developer experience. While global attention has focused on Apple Intelligence, India's developer community is also hopeful for improvements to Xcode, which allows them to develop, test, and deploy apps across all Apple platforms. Akshat Srivastava, one of the 50 globally selected winners of Apple's 2024 Swift Student Challenge, said WWDC is a key moment for the community. 'For teams building enterprise apps, small gains in Xcode performance – faster compile times, stable simulators, and more reliable SwiftUI previews – can make a big difference,' he said. Srivastava added that native AI tools designed specifically for iOS workflows could help close gaps left by general-purpose code assistants. Independent developer Harshil Shah, who has been building for Apple platforms since 2017, said he's eager about the rumoured design unification across iOS and macOS. 'A consistent design language would simplify UI decisions across platforms and benefit users and developers alike,' he said. On Apple Intelligence, Shah said that offering accessible APIs, without steep hardware constraints, could be a major enabler for developers. In Tokyo, iOS engineer Keshav Kishore, who worked across India and Japan, sees potential in on-device AI . 'Tools like GitHub Copilot are not always compatible with enterprise compliance needs,' he said. 'An AI-native Xcode experience, built by Apple and integrated locally, would be ideal for many companies.' by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Buy Brass Idols - Handmade Brass Statues for Home & Gifting Luxeartisanship Buy Now Undo Mayank Gupta, who runs Swift Anytime, an independent Apple developer community, believes the ecosystem is ready for deeper engagement. 'SwiftUI has matured and is widely adopted among startups. But for legacy apps, UIKit remains entrenched,' he said. Gupta added that Apple recently began hosting community events in Bengaluru, a positive step. 'We'd love to see more open developer engagement in India, which has one of the largest iOS talent pools globally.' Across conversations, one theme stands out: Apple's developer tools remain central to how Indian teams build, iterate, and ship products. While AI and design updates dominate headlines, developers are watching WWDC closely for the details that shape their daily work and their future with Apple.

Currency devaluation is quietly eating into your wealth, expert warns
Currency devaluation is quietly eating into your wealth, expert warns

India Today

time13 minutes ago

  • India Today

Currency devaluation is quietly eating into your wealth, expert warns

Many people may not realise it, but their savings could already be losing value. Finance educator Akshat Shrivastava has raised a warning that currency devaluation and continuous money printing are slowly reducing the real value of people's wealth. And this is happening without most people noticing a post on social media platform X, Shrivastava explained this through a simple example. 'Imagine that your 2BHK flat is worth Rs 1 crore. The next year, its value falls to Rs 90 lakh. How would you feel?' he asked. 'What if I tell you: this is actually happening—without you even taking note of it.'Shrivastava's concern is not about direct price drops. Instead, he points to the slow and steady fall in the purchasing power of money. He says that this type of devaluation is not just visible when comparing currencies across countries, but also when comparing money to assets like gold, real estate, Bitcoin, or land.'Governments right now can print as much money as they wish. And, guess what? They are doing it,' he wrote. According to him, the rise in the supply of money is one of the key reasons for this quiet loss of gave an example from the United States, where the Federal Reserve reportedly printed 20% of the total US money supply in just one year after the COVID-19 outbreak. While this helped in boosting short-term spending and supported the economy, Shrivastava says the long-term impact is more serious.'If the rate of money printing is 10%, and your post-tax deposit rate is 6%, your money is losing 4% of its value each year,' he said. In simple terms, if you keep your money in a bank savings account or fixed deposit and inflation or money printing rises faster than your interest earnings, you are becoming poorer over also pointed out how many people don't seem worried about it. 'People don't protest. Because most of them don't bother with economics. Cricket and politics keep them busy,' he added, hinting that financial awareness is still low among the general deal with the risk of devaluation, Shrivastava suggests investing in assets that tend to hold or increase value over time. 'Stocks, (good quality) real estate, gold, and Bitcoin are all hedges,' he said. However, he warned that these are not always safe either if one buys them at the wrong an example, he said, 'If you would have bought BTC on its 2021 high, you would have made 0% returns for 3 years—even though its 10-year CAGR is 88%.' This means even strong long-term assets can give flat returns if purchased without proper timing or believes that the real problem is not just picking the right assets but knowing how to invest wisely. 'Most people don't know how to execute these points: what assets to buy when, how to analyse value, how much to buy, how much cash to keep, and how to book profits,' Shrivastava final advice was not to blindly stick to one asset class or investment idea while ignoring the bigger risk. 'Every year, their wealth keeps going down—in real terms,' he warned. advertisement

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