Bangladesh Interim Chief Yunus To Stay After Resignation Threat Amid Protests Over Rohingya Corridor
'Spy' YouTuber Jyoti Malhotra's Trouble Mounts, Hisar Court Extends Police Custody by 4 Days
Travel vlogger turned alleged spy — Haryana-based YouTuber Jyoti Malhotra's arrest has sent shockwaves across the nation. With 3.77 lakh YouTube followers, Malhotra is now at the centre of a chilling espionage scandal. Her police custody has been extended by four more days after being nabbed on May 17 for allegedly passing sensitive information to Pakistan's ISI. Investigations reveal she was in regular contact with ISI handler Ali Hasan and had even visited Pakistan twice. Her links with Pakistan High Commission official 'Rahim' alias Danish — now expelled — are under intense scrutiny. Three phones, a laptop, and bank accounts are being probed for foreign transactions. Did she sell secrets under the guise of travel vlogging? Was she part of a larger spy network? Watch this explosive report as we uncover the dark side of a digital influencer turned alleged agent.#jyotimalhotra #pakistanspy #youtubeespionage #spyyoutuber #isiaffair #travelvloggerarrest #spynetwork #espionageindia #hisaryoutuber #indianews #nationalsecurity #toibharat
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Time of India
36 minutes ago
- Time of India
Indian MPs' World tour builds narrative on Pak-based terror
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Indian MPs cutting across party lines have been able to create a strong narrative against Pakistan-based terror infrastructure around the world, from Japan to Colombia and the US to Africa, Russia, Southeast Asia and West Asia over the last two most delegations are back in India after their multi-nation tours, the delegation from the US is expected to return on Friday. Speaking at the National Press Club in Washington DC on Wednesday, Congress MP Shashi Tharoor, who is leading an all-party delegation to the US to brief key stakeholders on Operation Sindoor , dismissed the Trump administration's claim that its trade diplomacy played a major role in averting a full-fledged military conflict between India and the visits, key stakeholders and ministers from across countries extended strong support to India's fight against cross-border terror as each delegation made presentations on the Pahalgam terror attack, Pak-based terror infrastructure and Operation the delegation led by Tharoor convinced the Colombian government to withdraw a statement criticising India, another delegation led by JDU MP Sanjay Jha was successful in sensitising Japan on the menace of cross-border terror. Immune from any cross-border illegal migration and extremism, the Japanese society remains passive to the threat of cross-border terror, experts on Japanese affairs pointed Brazil, the Tharoor-led delegation delivered a message on cross-border terror infrastructure which could assist in shaping the BRICS bloc's position on terrorism at the upcoming summit in Rio De Janeiro on July visits to Egypt and Indonesia were significant as both are attempting to blunt the Pakistani narrative in the Organisation of Islamic Conference meetings. While Indonesia (having the world's biggest Muslim population) has a principled position against any secessionism and terrorism, Egypt has a strong stance against terrorism and visits by MPs to Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the UAE were critical to reaffirm India's security partnerships. In Algeria, the Jay Panda-led delegation was successful in driving home the point of common threat from Pakistan-based Sierra Leone and Liberia often do not receive senior-level political figures from India and therefore the trips by MPs to these countries, which are getting into the UN Security Council as non-permanent members, were important. Both Liberia and Sierra Leone extended special gestures to back India's approach on cross-border the visits to Russia and France by MPs reaffirmed India's strong security and defence partnerships with the old strategic partners, the trips to Italy, Slovenia, Latvia, Spain and the UK were significant to drive home the point how India has been a victim of relentless state-sponsored cross-border the US, the Tharoor-led delegation met the leadership of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian Americans in the 119th Congress, co-chairs Rep Ro Khanna and Rep Rich McCormick and vice co-chairs Rep Andy Barr and Rep Marc Veasey. The parliamentary delegation briefed the caucus members on the cross-border terrorism faced by India. The Congressmen expressed unequivocal and bipartisan condemnation for the terror attack in Pahalgam.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Tripura ADC inks MoUs with UK institutions
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Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Supreme Court Ruling On Gun Companies: Supreme Court Blocks Mexico's Gun Lawsuit Against US Companies, ET LegalWorld
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday spared two American gun companies from a lawsuit by Mexico's government accusing them of aiding illegal firearms trafficking to drug cartels and fueling gun violence in the southern neighbor of the United States. The justices in a 9-0 ruling authored by liberal Justice Elena Kagan overturned a lower court's ruling that had allowed the lawsuit to proceed against firearms maker Smith & Wesson and distributor Interstate Arms. The lower court had found that Mexico plausibly alleged that the companies aided and abetted unlawful sales routing guns to Mexican drug cartels, harming its government. Advt Advt Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals Subscribe to our newsletter to get latest insights & analysis. Download ETLegalWorld App Get Realtime updates Save your favourite articles Scan to download App The justices embraced the argument made by the companies for dismissal of Mexico's suit under a 2005 U.S. law called the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act that broadly shields gun companies from liability for crimes committed with their products. The Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had decided in 2024 that the alleged conduct by the companies fell outside these Supreme Court decided that while it has little doubt that U.S. companies are aware of some unlawful sales to Mexican gun traffickers, Mexico's lawsuit failed to allege that the companies had aided and abetted such illegal firearms sales by deliberately helping to bring about the transactions."Mexico's plausible allegations are of 'indifference' rather than assistance," Kagan wrote. "They are of the manufacturers merely allowing some unidentified 'bad actors' to make illegal use of their wares." The case came to the Supreme Court at a complicated time for U.S.-Mexican relations as President Donald Trump pursues on-again, off-again tariffs on Mexican goods. Trump has also accused Mexico of doing too little to stop the flow of synthetic drugs such as fentanyl and migrant arrivals at the lawsuit, filed in Boston in 2021, accused the two companies of violating various U.S. and Mexican laws. Mexico claims that the companies have deliberately maintained a distribution system that included firearms dealers who knowingly sell weapons to third-party, or "straw," purchasers who then traffic guns to cartels in suit also accused the companies of unlawfully designing and marketing their guns as military-grade weapons to drive up demand among the cartels, including by associating their products with the American military and law enforcement. The gun companies said they make and sell lawful avoid its lawsuit being dismissed under the 2005 law, Mexico was required to plausibly allege that the companies aided and abetted illegal gun sales and that such conduct was the "proximate cause" - a legal principle involving who is responsible for causing an injury - of the harms claimed by Mexico. The Supreme Court, which heard arguments in the case on March 4, declined to resolve the proximate cause question after finding that Mexico's suit failed to adequately allege aiding and Arrocha Olabuenaga, the legal adviser for Mexico's Foreign Ministry, vowed that Mexico will continue pursuing its legal fight."While we are disappointed with the decision from this Supreme Court, we are convinced of the strength of our arguments and the evidence that upholds them, and we are encouraged by the support at home and abroad for Mexico's actions," he in the lawsuit had sought monetary damages of an unspecified amount and a court order requiring Smith & Wesson and Interstate Arms to take steps to "abate and remedy the public nuisance they have created in Mexico."The Second Amendment Foundation, a gun rights group that backed the U.S. gun companies in the case, welcomed Thursday's ruling."The lawsuit, dreamt up by multiple gun control groups, had one goal - bankrupt the American firearms market by allowing civil liability to apply for the criminal misuse of its products," the group said in a social media post. "Thankfully the Supreme Court stepped in and squashed it."Gun violence fueled by trafficked U.S.-made firearms has contributed to a decline in business investment and economic activity in Mexico and forced its government to incur unusually high costs on services including healthcare, law enforcement and the military, according to the a country with strict firearms laws, has said most of its gun homicides are committed with weapons trafficked from the United States and valued at more than $250 million Perez Ricart, an international affairs researcher at Mexico's Center for Economic Research and Teaching (CIDE), criticized the ruling."Once again, the industry is shielded. It doesn't matter how many bullets cross the border or how many people are killed on the Mexican side. Bullets are not the only things that kill; so does the legal impunity guaranteed by Washington," Ricart said in a social media post.