logo
CRPF constable found dead in Bijapur

CRPF constable found dead in Bijapur

The Hindu6 days ago
A Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) constable, in his thirties, died by suicide at a camp in Chhattisgarh's Bijapur district on Wednesday (July 30, 2025), said a senior police officer.
Yadav, a resident of Thakuri village in Bhojpur district of Bihar, had joined duty on Tuesday after returning from leave, he said. He was on 'morcha duty' where he was one of the men guarding the outer periphery of the camp, said another officer.
An investigation was underway to ascertain the exact reason that prompted him to take the extreme step, the officers said, adding that the mortal remains would be sent to his native place after postmortem.
As many as 177 security personnel have died by suicide in the State between 2019 and June 15, 2025 of which 26 belonged to the CRPF, one of the central forces engaged in anti-Naxal operations, the State government had recently informed the Assembly.
Assistance for overcoming suicidal thoughts is available on the following link
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Video: MNS workers storm Nagpur bank, assault staff for action against labourer
Video: MNS workers storm Nagpur bank, assault staff for action against labourer

India Today

time14 minutes ago

  • India Today

Video: MNS workers storm Nagpur bank, assault staff for action against labourer

Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) workers created a ruckus at a Yes Bank branch in Nagpur on Monday, assaulted a bank staff member and vandalised the premises. The incident took place at the Mount Road branch after a borrower, who alleged injustice by the bank, sought the support of Raj Thackeray's party men, police said.A video of the MNS workers slapping a staff member, raising slogans, defacing the bank premises and creating a ruckus has gone viral on social media. advertisementAs per the information, the borrower, identified as Indrajit Baliram Mule, had reportedly taken a loan from Yes Bank to purchase an earth-moving machine. According to Mule, he was struggling with repayment and had approached the bank multiple times seeking a resolution. However, the bank, he claimed, did not offer any assistance or settlement option. Subsequently, when he took the heavy-duty machine to take a driving test and obtain a driving licence at the Regional Transport Office (RTO), the bank allegedly seized the vehicle and later sold it without informing by the bank's action, Mule approached the MNS for help. Following this, a group of MNS workers gathered outside the Yes Bank branch and launched a protest. The demonstration quickly turned aggressive, with slogans being painted on the walls branding the bank as "corrupt" and "anti-Maharashtra".During the chaos, one of the MNS workers slapped a bank official and threatened other staff members. Black ink was also splashed on the bank's nameplate. Police rushed to the scene and detained some of the MNS workers involved in the police confirmed the incident and said an investigation was underway. They added that legal action would be taken based on the statements of the bank staff and available CCTV footage. Security has reportedly been increased at the branch following the MNS maintains that its action was in support of a common man denied justice, questions are being raised about the legality and ethics of such are also examining whether the bank followed due process in seizing and selling the earth-moving Bank has not yet issued an official statement regarding the incident or the allegations made by the borrower while further investigation into the matter is came days after several MNS workers were detained by police for creating a ruckus at a private bank in Nagpur following a row over the usage of the Marathi of MNS workers had gathered outside the bank branch and also had a verbal spat with bank officials after they sought the Hindi translation of an FIR registered in Marathi for the purpose of settling an accident claim.- Ends

Congress MP raises doubts over Op Mahadev, asks if terrorists killed were ‘real' Pahalgam attackers
Congress MP raises doubts over Op Mahadev, asks if terrorists killed were ‘real' Pahalgam attackers

The Print

timean hour ago

  • The Print

Congress MP raises doubts over Op Mahadev, asks if terrorists killed were ‘real' Pahalgam attackers

The Rajya Sabha MP was speaking on the issue of deploying Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel inside the parliament, including on marshalling duties, which the Congress party has objected to. 'They can't catch the actual aatankwadi (terrorists). They don't know how to do it. It took them so long to catch them. We don't even know if they are the real ones, but they will come to parliament and target the women. Great. This is their level and limit,' Chowdhury told mediapersons outside parliament Tuesday. New Delhi: A week after Home Minister Amit Shah said the three terrorists who carried out the Pahalgam attack had been killed in an encounter, Congress Rajya Sabha MP Renuka Chowdhury raised doubts whether those eliminated in Operation Mahadev were the 'real' perpetrators of the 22 April massacre. 'They can use power on us, police on us, and marshal power on us and think that we will be scared,' Chowdhury said. Giving details around the process of identification of the terrorists who carried out the Pahalgam attack, the Union home minister told parliament 29 July that a joint team comprising troops from the Indian Army, CRPF and Jammu and Kashmir Police killed three terrorists belonging to Lashkar-e-Taiba on the upper reaches of Srinagar. He identified the trio as Suleiman, a 'grade A category' commander of the LeT, Afghan and Jibran, also grade A category terrorists. He asserted that Indian agencies had ample proof and evidence that they were the perpetrators of the Pahalgam attack. He had said that ballistic reports of the two AK-47s and one M-4 rifle by the Chandigarh Forensic Laboratory matched with cartridges recovered from the scene of crime in Pahalgam, confirming the use of the very rifles behind the ghastly attack. Operation Mahadev was a joint operation by the Army, CRPF and Jammu and Kashmir Police launched in Kashmir's Dachigam on 28 July. Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav had questioned the timing of the operation, pointing out its coincidence with the Parliament session. Congress leader Chowdhury takes the debate a step further by casting doubt on the identity of the terrorists and the authenticity of the encounter. Speaking after Shah's detailed speech in the lower house on 29 July, Yadav pointed out the encounter killing of the terrorists happened 28 July, when the parliament was set to discuss the Pahalgam attack and subsequent Operation Sindoor launched by the armed forces. 'We are all happy … terrorists killed, and we support it. But who is reaping the political gain after all? They are asking why I am not thanking them for Operation Mahadev? When it came to giving support, all the political parties of the country were with you…why did the encounter happen only yesterday?' Yadav said in the Lok Sabha during the debate on Operation Sindoor. (Edited by Ajeet Tiwari) Also Read: Hindus can never be terrorists, says Amit Shah during Op Sindoor debate in Rajya Sabha

J&K Governor who oversaw Article 370 abrogation, Satya Pal Malik became vocal BJP critic in his last years
J&K Governor who oversaw Article 370 abrogation, Satya Pal Malik became vocal BJP critic in his last years

Indian Express

time2 hours ago

  • Indian Express

J&K Governor who oversaw Article 370 abrogation, Satya Pal Malik became vocal BJP critic in his last years

A former BJP leader from western Uttar Pradesh's Jat belt who started his political journey in socialist circles, Satya Pal Malik was the Governor of Jammu and Kashmir when the Centre abrogated Article 370 and scrapped its special Constitutional status on August 5, 2019. Exactly six years since that day, Malik passed away in New Delhi on Tuesday after a prolonged illness. He was 79. In the last few years, Malik had been publicly critical of the Narendra Modi government, making statements ranging from the allegation that the Centre had asked him to keep quiet on the lapses that led to the Pulwama attack in 2019 to corruption in Goa, where he was the Governor after his J&K stint. This May, the CBI filed a chargesheet against Malik in an alleged case of corruption in the Kiru hydel project in Kashmir. Ironically, it was the veteran leader himself who had publicly spoken of the alleged corruption in the project in 2021 while he was serving as Meghalaya Governor. The statement had left the BJP-led NDA government at the Centre red-faced as he alleged the involvement of an RSS leader. His critics had dismissed all these statements, claiming he wanted to resurrect his political career in Uttar Pradesh. 'Saddened by the passing away of Shri Satyapal Malik Ji. My thoughts are with his family and supporters in this hour of grief. Om Shanti,' Prime Minister Narendra Modi posted on X. Born on July 24, 1946, in Hisawada village in UP's Baghpat district, Malik started as a student union leader in Meerut in 1968-69. 'In the late 1960s, he was president of the student union of Meerut College. This was the time of anti-Congressism and the 'Angrezi Hatao (remove English)' movement in UP. He started as a follower of (Ram Manohar) Lohia ji and joined the socialist youth organisation, Yuvjan Sabha,' JD (U) leader KC Tyagi, who knew Malik for 50 years, told The Indian Express. Tyagi recalled that Malik was always a straight talker and a good orator. Malik won the Baghpat Assembly seat in 1974 as a nominee of Chaudhary Charan Singh's Bharatiya Kranti Dal. He later joined the Bharatiya Lok Dal under Charan Singh and became its general secretary. During the Emergency, Tyagi recalled, Malik and he were in Meerut jail. In 1980, Malik entered the Rajya Sabha on a Lok Dal ticket. By 1984, he had moved to the Congress, which sent him to the Rajya Sabha in 1986. The following year, in the wake of the Bofors scam, he resigned from the Congress. Malik joined V P Singh and two years later won the Lok Sabha election from Aligarh as a Janata Dal candidate. In 1990, he briefly served as the Union Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs and Tourism. Malik briefly joined the Samajwadi Party before moving to the BJP in 2004. He unsuccessfully contested the Lok Sabha elections, losing to Rashtriya Lok Dal chief Ajit Singh from Baghpat. In its first term, the Modi government appointed Malik head of a parliamentary team that looked into the Land Acquisition Bill. After the panel gave its recommendations against the Bill, the government put it in cold storage. Run as Governor In October 2017, the government appointed Malik as the Bihar Governor, but transferred him to J&K just over a year later. With that, he became the first politician appointed to the post since militancy began in Kashmir. His tenure was a controversial one. First came 'faxgate'. In November 2018, when Peoples Democratic Party chief Mehbooba Mufti staked claim to form the government with the support of the National Conference and the Congress and sent a fax to the Raj Bhavan, it went unacknowledged. A representation by People's Conference leader Sajad Lone also went unanswered. Malik dissolved the Assembly that evening, citing the 'impossibility of forming a stable government by the coming together of political parties with competing ideologies', the 'fragile' security situation, and reports of horse-trading. Later, he said history would have remembered him as a 'dishonest man' had he allowed Lone to form the government. 'So, I ended the matter once and for all. Those who abuse me will continue to do so, but I am convinced I did the right thing,' he said. Months after the Assembly's dissolution, J&K's special Constitutional status was revoked and it was made a Union Territory. Just two months after that, Malik was moved out to Goa. This is when his ties with the BJP started souring, and the sense of unhappiness only strengthened when he was shifted to Meghalaya. In March 2020, at a public meeting in Baghpat, Malik said J&K Governors largely just drank and played golf. 'The Governor has no work,' he said. Outspoken by nature, he ruffled feathers in Goa, too, criticising the Pramod Sawant government's handling of the Covid-19 pandemic. In October 2021, he told the 'India Today' news channel that the government had kept him in the dark about its outbreak. He also alleged large-scale corruption in the Sawant government, saying he had informed PM Modi about it, and was moved because he raised this matter. Malik was in Meghalaya when he levelled the corruption allegations about the hydel project in Kashmir. 'Two files came before me in Jammu and Kashmir. One of them pertained to Ambani and another to a senior RSS functionary. One of the secretaries told me these are fraud files, but he also said you can get Rs 150 crore each in the two deals. I rejected the offer, saying, 'I have come with five kurtas and will go with them,'' he said. The speech created an uproar, and J&K Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha ordered a CBI enquiry into the matter. The CBI subsequently registered two FIRs, conducted multiple searches, and questioned several people, including Malik. Malik was also openly critical of the way the Centre handled the farmers' protests against three farm laws, which were subsequently repealed. He told The Indian Express in February 2021 that farmers should be engaged and not 'sent back insulted'. In January 2022, he targeted the PM in a speech in Dadri in western UP, saying he fought with Modi over the farmers' demands during a meeting. 'He was very arrogant. When I told him that 500 of our own (farmers) had died… he said, 'Did they die for me?'' he was heard saying in a video clip from the function.

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