logo
Jaisalmer boy crushed as school gate collapses

Jaisalmer boy crushed as school gate collapses

Time of India6 days ago
Jaisalmer: A seven-year-old boy was crushed to death Monday when the entrance pillar and gate of a govt-run girls' school collapsed in Poonam Nagar village, around 50km from Jaisalmer, intensifying public fury over unsafe school infrastructure in the state.
The death of Arbaz Khan — a Class 1 student from a nearby boys' school — came after seven children, aged 7 to 13, died in a school building collapse in Jhalawar's Piplodi village Friday.
Arbaz had gone to meet his sisters — Madhu, 14, and Raju, 12 — after class when the stone-laden top beam and adjoining pillar suddenly gave way. His mother fainted on hearing the news and was hospitalised. Arbaz belonged to the Manganiyar community and had lost his father during the Covid pandemic.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

3 elephant tusks recovered from house at Tripura's Unakoti, suspect absconding
3 elephant tusks recovered from house at Tripura's Unakoti, suspect absconding

Indian Express

time3 hours ago

  • Indian Express

3 elephant tusks recovered from house at Tripura's Unakoti, suspect absconding

The Tripura Police filed a case and began a probe after the recovery of three elephant tusks from a house at Kailasahar in the Unakoti district Saturday. No one has been arrested in this case as of now. The police said they recovered these tusks following a raid conducted at one Ayub Ali's house in the evening based on secret information. Ali, aged between 35 and 40 years old, was known to be an electrician. The police said he escaped from the house before they arrived. 'A case was lodged against him. We will soon arrest him', said a police officer, adding that they are investigating to find more details about the tusks. The tusks are currently in police custody for investigation. In January this year, the police lodged a case after the carcass of an elephant with a few body parts missing was recovered from the Pramodenagar area under the Kalyanpur Forest Division, falling under the Teliamura sub-division in Khowai district of Tripura. According to a report by the state forest department from a few years ago, Tripura has 102 elephants, including 42 wild elephants and 60 in captivity. A new elephant survey was undertaken in March 2022, but the reports could not be finalised since a Covid lockdown was imposed soon after. Tripura villages have seen frequent elephant-human conflicts. As part of setting up natural defence mechanisms for villagers, the state government started a project to keep bees in agricultural fields to thwart elephant attacks, as jumbos are known to fear stingy insects. The government initiated projects to cultivate elephant fodder in the jungles, including the planting of bamboo and bananas, the establishment of watering holes, and the construction of other infrastructure as part of the check dams built in the forests.

Tailor who kidnapped, murdered 8-year-old held after 26 years in Delhi
Tailor who kidnapped, murdered 8-year-old held after 26 years in Delhi

News18

time4 hours ago

  • News18

Tailor who kidnapped, murdered 8-year-old held after 26 years in Delhi

Last Updated: New Delhi, Aug 3 (PTI) A man convicted of kidnapping and murdering an eight-year-old boy in 1993 has been arrested by the Crime Branch of the Delhi Police after evading law for over 26 years, an official said on Sunday. The accused, identified as Raj Kishore (55) alias Bade Lalla, a resident of Kanpur Dehat in Uttar Pradesh, was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1996 for the brutal murder of a businessman's son. 'He was later granted a six-week parole by the Delhi High Court in 1999 but he never returned to prison," Deputy Commissioner of Police (Crime) Sanjeev Kumar Yadav said. The officer further mentioned that after several years of evasion and being declared a proclaimed offender in 2014, Kishore was finally apprehended from Ghaziabad's Khoda Colony on August 2. According to the police, the incident occurred on December 28, 1993, when Kishore and his associate abducted the son of a garment factory owner from Kalyanpuri. The accused then demanded a ransom of Rs 30,000 from the child's father, promising the boy's safe return. However, after receiving the money, the accused strangled the child and dumped his body in a drain in the Kalyanpuri area, the police said. 'The case was registered at the Kalyanpuri Police Station. Following investigation and trial, Raj Kishore was convicted and sentenced to life by the Karkardooma Sessions Court in 1996," said the DCP. Kishore was lodged in Tihar jail when he jumped parole in 1999, following which he kept changing his location to evade arrest. He stayed in Patna for four years, lived in Jaipur for nearly 13 years, and then shifted to Barnala in Punjab for another three years. During this time, he worked odd jobs and kept a low profile, occasionally visiting his native village in Kanpur Dehat, the police said. 'It was only during the COVID-19 pandemic that he returned to Kanpur permanently and started a tailoring business under a new identity," the DCP added. The officer further mentioned that a crime branch team was tasked to track down parole jumpers involved in heinous crimes. The team gathered information about Kishore's presence in Kanpur. Several attempts were made to nab him in Kanpur, but local support helped him escape each time. 'After strategic planning, the police managed to lure him out of his hideout and arrested him in Ghaziabad," the officer added. The arrest came after a two-month-long operation involving over 10 personnel, the police said, noting that Kishore's associate in the 1993 crime had already completed his sentence. PTI BM BM MPL MPL view comments First Published: August 03, 2025, 16:15 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

ED probe into Anil Ambani linked companies: What turns bad loan into fraud
ED probe into Anil Ambani linked companies: What turns bad loan into fraud

Business Standard

time10 hours ago

  • Business Standard

ED probe into Anil Ambani linked companies: What turns bad loan into fraud

On Saturday, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) arrested a company director in a ₹3,000 crore loan 'fraud' case allegedly linked to entities associated with Anil Ambani's Reliance ADAG group. The arrest, under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), is the first in the case. While the probe continues, it brings to light a key regulatory distinction: when does a loan stop being a business risk and start being a criminal fraud? Default, wilful default, fraud: What RBI says India's financial system sees loan issues on a scale: default, wilful default, and fraud. Fraud: According to RBI's Master Directions on Frauds Classification and Reporting by Commercial Banks and Select FIs, a fraud involves deliberate deception using false documents, shell firms, and accounting manipulation. Classification as fraud follows a forensic audit and internal bank committee approval. When does PMLA come in? Fraud under PMLA is triggered when the activity generates 'proceeds of crime'. The sequence is: A default occurs The bank detects anomalies and initiates a forensic audit The audit confirms diversion or misreporting The bank files an FIR and classifies the loan as fraud ED or CBI steps in if criminality is apparent According to Section 3 of the PMLA, anyone knowingly involved in activities connected to proceeds of crime is guilty of money laundering. Where the Anil Ambani-linked case fits in The ED is investigating loans worth ₹3,000 crore taken by entities allegedly tied to the Reliance ADAG group. The funds were reportedly routed through shell companies to avoid repayment, triggering PMLA charges. The arrested individual, a director of a Mumbai firm, allegedly played a key role in the laundering process. While Anil Ambani has not been named in the arrest note, the ED has reportedly issued a lookout notice against him. He has also been summoned for questioning by the agency on Tuesday, August 5. Loan fraud vs bad loan: What's the difference? In India, many large defaults stem from business failure, not fraud. Some of the common causes include: Market downturns Failed business models External shocks (like Covid-19 or raw material inflation) In such cases, the resolution is civil and typically handled under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC). Fraud, however, requires evidence of intent—such as fake documentation or shell entities—and often results in criminal proceedings. What past loan frauds reveal Several high-profile frauds have followed similar playbooks: DHFL–Wadhawan (₹34,000 crore): Fake housing loans and fund diversion to shell entities ABG Shipyard (₹22,842 crore): Inflated assets and overseas fund routing Rotomac Pens (₹3,695 crore): Misuse of export credits for unrelated firms IL&FS: Inter-company lending inflated asset books and masked real exposure What happens after a fraud label? Once a loan is declared fraudulent: Borrowers are barred from bank finance for five years Lenders can initiate asset recovery via SARFAESI or IBC ED/CBI may seize assets and press charges Criminal convictions can lead to jail terms and financial penalties Borrowers often contest the fraud tag in courts, delaying outcomes Both civil and criminal paths proceed in parallel, making resolution complex and time-consuming.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store